27/09/2019

Could Climate Change Fuel The Rise Of Right-Wing Nationalism?

The Conversation | 

When people feel threatened, they’re more receptive to politicians who espouse xenophobic rhetoric. Trybex/Shutterstock.com
Two trends have defined the past decade and both have been on display at this year’s session of the United Nations General Assembly.
One has been the escalating effects of climate change, which were the focus of the United Nations’ Climate Action Summit. Forest fires, floods and hurricanes are all rising in their frequency and severity. Eight of the last 10 years have been the warmest on record. Marine biologists warned that coral reefs in the U.S. could disappear entirely by the 2040s.
The other trend has been the surge of right-wing nationalist politics across Western nations, which includes Donald Trump’s election in the U.S., and the rise of nationalist political parties around the world.
Indeed, the first four speeches of the United Nations general debate were given by Brazilian right-wing populist Jair Bolsonaro, Trump, Egyptian dictator Abdel Fattah el-Sisi and far-right Turkish President Recep Erdogan.
These two trends are rarely discussed together. When they are, their correlation is sometimes viewed as an unfortunate coincidence, since many nationalist politicians actively obstruct climate change solutions.
However, our new research suggests that these two trends may be closely related, and not in the way you might think. The effects of climate change – and the way it makes societies feel threatened – may be one of the elements fueling the rise of right-wing nationalism.

How climate shapes culture
To understand how climate shapes culture, it’s important to step away from current events and consider the way the climate has influenced societies throughout human history.
Cultures can vary in what’s called their “tightness” – the strictness or flexibility of their rules and traditions, and the severity of their punishments for rule breakers.
The Fellahin people of Egypt, for example, were one of the tightest cultures that we analyzed. For centuries, they’ve enforced strict gender norms and strong expectations for how children should be raised.
When cultures feel threatened – whether by war, disease or economic upheaval – they tend to become tighter.
But ecological threats can be just as strongly connected to tightening.
In one analysis, we showed that rates of famine and land scarcity predicted cultural tightness in historical societies. The Fellahin people have faced a constant threat of flooding, and have endured frequent earthquakes, sand storms and rockslides.
The Fellahin have weathered centuries of environmental disaster. Brooklyn Museum
Centuries of climate catastrophe can also predict differences in the cultural tightness in societies today. In another study we found that nations that have endured the highest rates of drought, food scarcity, natural disaster and climate instability have the tightest cultures today.
Even within the U.S., the states most vulnerable to climate disasters have the tightest cultures. A 2014 study found that states like Texas, Oklahoma and Alabama – which have the highest criminal execution rates and corporal punishment rates in schools – also have the highest historical rates of natural disasters such as tornadoes, floods and hurricanes.
Evolutionary analyses suggest that cultural tightness can be functional – even necessary – in the face of climate disaster. It can make people more cooperative, and more likely to follow protocols, like rationing, during a drought.
But our latest studies examined a darker side of cultural tightness. We wanted to know whether tightness also made people less tolerant of minority religions, ethnicities or sexual orientation. In other words, we explored whether prejudice thrives in tighter societies.
This dynamic would have serious consequences for our understanding of geopolitical events. If climate anomalies such as hurricanes and forest fires have a “tightening” effect on cultures – and these catastrophes are happening more frequently – it might be driving more people toward politicians who espouse xenophobic, homophobic or racist rhetoric.

Environmental threat and prejudice
To test these ideas, we brought together a group of 19 researchers from eight different nations. With expertise in economics, psychology and anthropology, our team was well-suited to study the effect of environmental threats and culture on prejudice and political nationalism.
We ended up studying 86 historical societies, 25 modern nations and the 50 U.S. states, analyzing data on more than 3 million people.
The results were strikingly consistent across these populations. The cultures most vulnerable to climate threats had the strictest cultural norms, and the highest levels of prejudice against minorities. For example, in American states with histories of climate threat and cultural tightness, white respondents reported the highest levels of aversion to marrying someone who was black, Asian or Hispanic. Turkey and South Korea had the tightest cultures, and also showed the most aversion to living near someone who was a different ethnicity, sexuality or religion.
We next tested whether we could cultivate these social and political attitudes in a laboratory setting. We recruited 1,000 people from around the world. We had some write about a threatening event in their environment, including – but not restricted to – climate. Others wrote about a threatening event in their personal life. The final group wrote about what they had for breakfast.
Subjects who wrote about a threatening event in their environment reported the highest support for stricter societal rules and regulations. These same people also reported the most prejudice toward ethnic minorities. This study showed that even brief reminders of an ecological threat could have an effect on people’s political leanings and make them less tolerant.
Finally, we explored how these issues tied into modern elections. We recruited American and French individuals during their respective countries’ most recent presidential elections.
We found that voters who felt the most threatened were most likely to support harsher punishments for rule-breakers, more adherence to traditional norms and expressed the highest levels of prejudice. Voters who felt threatened were also most likely to vote for Donald Trump and Marine Le Pen, each of whom ran on law-and-order, anti-immigration platforms.

One feeds the other
According to just about every estimate, climate change will only worsen. Without serious and immediate reform, temperatures and sea levels will continue to rise, along with the risk of destabilizing climatic events.
The natural perils of climate change are evident to many people already. But our research underscores a less visible geopolitical peril. As climate change increases the level of environmental threat, cultures around the world may become tighter, and the exclusionary rhetoric of far-right nationalist politicians may sound more and more appealing.
Since far-right nationalists are notorious for ignoring climate change, the rise of these politicians may also exacerbate the effects of environmental threat. This may create a vicious cycle, in which the threat of climate disaster and far-right nationalism encourage one another over time.
In this way, bipartisan action on climate change may not just be necessary to save the environment. It may also be an important way to ensure values like free speech and tolerance are preserved in countries and cultures around the world.

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Morrison Warns Against 'Needless Anxiety' After Thunberg Climate Speech

Sydney Morning Herald - David Crowe

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has warned against fuelling "needless anxiety" among Australian children following a scathing judgment from Swedish activist Greta Thunberg about the danger of climate change.
Mr Morrison called for "context and perspective" in the climate debate after the 16-year-old activist condemned today's leaders for leaving the next generation with a ruined climate.
Greta Thunberg and Scott Morrison. Credit:Wires/Alex Ellinghausen
"You know, I want children growing up in Australia that feel positive about their future," the Prime Minister said.
"And I think it's important that we give them that confidence, that they will not only have a wonderful country and pristine environment to live in, but they'll also have an economy that they can live in as well.
"So I think we've got to caution against raising the anxieties of children in our country."
Mr Morrison made the remarks in New York on Tuesday while attending the United Nations General Assembly, after being criticised for not going to a UN summit on Monday on the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Scott Morrison says there's a need for context and perspective when it comes to the climate change debate so children don't suffer needless anxiety.

Foreign Minister Marise Payne represented Australia at the summit.
Ms Thunberg told the UN gathering her generation "will never forgive you" if today's leaders do not scale back carbon emissions and prevent catastrophic increases in temperature.
"I should be back in school on the other side of the ocean," she said. "Yet you all come to us young people for hope. How dare you. You have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty words."
Asked about her remarks, Mr Morrison said children should remember that Australia and others had rebuilt after existential threats in the past, citing the way the United Nations was created after World War II.
"Yes, we've got to deal with the policy issues and we've got to take it seriously, but I don't want our children having anxieties about these issues," he said.
"I say this as a parent, too: we've got to make sure that our kids understand the facts, but they also have the context and the perspective, and that we do not create an anxiety among children in how we talk about and deal with these very real issues."
Mr Morrison, who has two daughters, said he did not have deep conversations with the children about emission targets and the Paris agreement but did talk to them about fossil fuels.
"I encourage them to have a passionate, independent view about how they see the world, but I also give them a lot of context," he said.
"I don't allow them to be basically contorted into one particular view; I like them to make their own mind.
"But I also like to give them reassurance because the worst thing I would impose on any child is needless anxiety – they've got enough things to be anxious about.
"I've always liked kids to be kids. And we've got to let kids be kids.
"We can't have them growing up as mushrooms either, but at the same time I think we've got to get a bit of context and perspective into this."

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Scott Morrison Uses UN Speech To Slam 'Internal And Global Critics' Of Australia's Climate Change Policy

ABC NewsJames Glenday


Morrison defends Australia's action on climate change in UN speech (ABC News)

Key points
  • Scott Morrison tells the UN that critics "willingly overlook or ignore" Australia's work on climate change
  • Earlier, he suggested media was responsible for "misinformation" spread about his Government's climate policies
  • Seemingly referencing Greta Thunberg, Mr Morrison said "we should let our kids be kids"
Scott Morrison has used his biggest moment on the world stage yet to attack "internal and global critics" of his Government's climate change policies.
The Prime Minister has been slammed by scientists and a few business people for skipping a special climate conference in New York on Monday.
Some said the Government had so far failed to put forward a "credible climate or energy policy".
But during a wide-ranging address to the United Nations General Assembly, Mr Morrison hit back, claiming critics "willingly overlook or ignore" the work Australia has done to curb emissions.
"The facts simply don't fit the narrative they wish to project about our contribution," he added.
"Australia is doing our bit on climate change and we reject any suggestion to the contrary."

  Why the Coalition is misleading
on the Kyoto 2020 target
The Prime Minister pointed out that Australia is responsible for just 1.3 per cent of global emissions, said the country only accounted for 5.5 per cent of global coal production, and stated that $13.2 billion was invested in clean energy technologies in Australia in 2018.
He also declared the nation had "overachieved" on its 2020 Kyoto protocol targets and would meet its Paris emissions reduction goals too.
"We are committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 26 to 28 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030," Mr Morrison said.
"This is a credible, fair, responsible and achievable contribution to global climate change action."
Earlier in the day he seemed to suggest the media was responsible for spreading "misinformation" about his Government's climate policies.

  Paris 2030: Will we make it?
"What I've found is when I've sat down with Pacific leaders is they've been quite surprised," he told reporters.
"Criticisms that have been made about Australia are completely false and they're completely misleading and people have had a prejudiced view."
"Where do they get their information from? Maybe they read it.
"Australia's got nothing to apologise for."

Children's climate anxiety being 'facelessly exploited'
During his address, the Prime Minister revealed he received many letters from children concerned about their future.
He said he welcomed "their passion, especially when it comes to the environment".
Mr Morrison also seemed to make a direct reference to Swedish teenage climate change activist Greta Thunberg's highly-publicised address to world leaders on Monday and recent global youth climate strikes.

PM's Climate Summit snub sends strong message to neighbours
"We should let our kids be kids — teenagers be teenagers," he said.
"We must respect and harness the passion and aspiration of our younger generations, rather than allow others to compound or, worse, facelessly exploit their anxiety for their own agendas."
The Prime Minister also seemed to reject a warning from UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who said on Tuesday he feared the world could soon experience a "great fracture" and become divided between the United States and China.
Mr Morrison said that the planet was "complex and contested" but added that Australia would continue to work with its "great and powerful friends".
"Many fatalistically see a polarised world where countries feel pushed to make binary choices," he said.
"Australia will continue to resist this path."


Greta Thunberg delivers scathing speech at UN climate summit (ABC News)

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