The Influence of the Quality of Democracy on Reactions to Climate Change: Why Dealing with Climate Change Means Democratizing Climate Governance ID: 187 Frederic Hanusch Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities, Essen (Germany)
[email protected] Paper* presented at 2016 Berlin Conference on Global Environmental Change: Transformative Global Climate Governance “après Paris” The paper analyses how the quality of democracy influences the climate performance of established democracies. Two analyses compare established democracies based on their level of democracy and detect internal mechanisms to understand their different reactions to climate change. Therewith, the paper contributes to the question how transformative global climate governance “après Paris” can be translated successfully into national circumstances. Findings demonstrate that a higher quality of democracy influences climate performance for the most part positively. The positive influence of the quality of democracy, evaluated by empirical translations of control, equality and freedom, can be observed regarding output (policy targets etc.) and with certain limitations regarding outcome (GHG emission development). Research results are robust and show synergy in terms of detailed mechanisms verifying statistical trends. An initially outlined concept of democratic efficacy explains these findings by theorizing that democracy’s ability to produce desired and intended climate performances rises with increasing quality of democracy. Empirical analysis is conducted by applying an explanatory mixed methods design. Firstly, panel regressions deliver trends on the influence of the quality of democracy, as measured by the Democracy Barometer, on climate performance, as measured by the Climate Change Performance Index. Depending on combination of data, the number of countries ranges from 39 to 41 in 2004 to 2012 resulting in 193 to 326 country-years.