climate advocacy in the obama years: assessing strategies for societal change

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Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change @MCNisbet Matthew C. Nisbet Associate Professor Northeastern University

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On September 25 at Boston University, as part of a Howard Hughes Medical Institute-sponsored series organized by BU climate researcher David Marchant, I will be giving the following lecture, drawing on insights from two forthcoming papers. Below are details on the talk followed by references and links to the papers. Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change Matthew C. Nisbet Northeastern University Sept 25 5pm-6pm Boston University Life Sciences Building, B-01 24 Cummington Mall This lecture evaluates the contrasting political strategies, communication approaches, and policy options pursued by U.S. advocacy groups, philanthropists, and their allies as they urge societal action to address climate change. Though these often competing networks of groups accept the undeniable, human causes of climate change, they each tend to emphasize a unique discourse about the problem, reflecting diverging views of society, nature, technology, policy, and politics. By reflecting on these differences and their implications, we can usefully think through the many ways that our own biases shape how we perceive the political conflict over climate change, who we blame, and what we prefer to be done. The goal is not to choose among competing perspectives, but to constructively grapple with their tensions and uncertainties. Through this process, we can hold our own convictions and opinions more lightly, identifying what is of value among the ideas offered by those on the left, right, and in the center. Nisbet, M.C. (in press). Disruptive Ideas: Public Intellectuals and their Arguments for Action on Climate Change. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Climate Change. http://climateshiftproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Nisbet_inpress_PublicIntellectualsClimateChange_WIREClimateChange.pdf Nisbet, M.C. (in press). Environmental Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing New Strategies for Political Change. In N. Vig & M. Kraft (Eds), Environmental Policy: New Directions for the Twenty-First Century, 9th Edition. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Press. http://climateshiftproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Nisbet_inpress_EnvironmentalAdvocacyObamaYears_CQPress1.pdf

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Page 1: Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change

Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years:

Assessing Strategies for Societal Change

@MCNisbet

Matthew C. Nisbet

Associate Professor

Northeastern University

Page 2: Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change

The Design to Win Report (2007)

@MCNisbet

o “A cap on carbon output—and an accompanying

market for emissions permits—will prompt a sea

change that washes over the entire global economy.”

o “The good news is that we already have the technology

and know-how to achieve these carbon reductions—

often at a cost savings.”

o “Climate change, unlike a lot of large-scale problems, is

actually one that is solvable. It is also one where we

know what we need to do. We have the best data in the

world on how to prevent climate change. Everything

was ranked by magnitude, location and sector. It’s a

systematic approach to problem solving.” – Hal Harvey,

NY Times profile

Page 3: Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change
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This Changes Everything?

Capitalism vs. the Climate

@MCNisbet

“Our economic model is at war with life on

Earth. We can’t change the laws of nature,

but we can change our growth economy.

And that’s why climate change is not just a

disaster, it’s also our best chance to

demand and build a better world.”

Page 6: Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change

#PeoplesClimate vs. #PeoplesEnergy?

Energy Access and Decarbonization

@MCNisbetSource: Clean Air Task Force

Page 7: Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change

#PeoplesClimate vs. #PeoplesEnergy?

Energy Access and Decarbonization

@MCNisbethttp://weburbanist.com/2011/02/21/then-now-the-stunning-speed-of-urban-development/

Shanghai 1990 v 2010 Dubai 1990 v 2007

Page 8: Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change

#PeoplesClimate vs. #PeoplesEnergy?

Energy Access and Decarbonization

@MCNisbetSource: BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2013

Page 9: Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change

#PeoplesClimate vs. #PeoplesEnergy?

Energy Access and Decarbonization

@MCNisbetSource: New York Times & IEA

Page 10: Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change

Telling Stories about Wicked Problems

@MCNisbet

o The more complex a problem like climate

change, the more equally plausible

discourses and narratives exist about

what should be done.

o Climate change serves as an opportunity

for different groups to mobilize on behalf

of their values, goals and vision for

society.

o Climate change is “a synecdoche – a

figurative turn of phrase in which

something stands in for something

else—for something much more important

than simply the way humans are changing

the weather,” – Mike Hulme

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Models of science communication: How views of the science–society interface among social

scientists and practitioners have evolved over time.

Scheufele D A PNAS 2014;111:13585-13592

©2014 by National Academy of Sciences

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Ideological Polarization and Fragmentation

@MCNisbet

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Ideological Polarization and Fragmentation

@MCNisbet

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@MCNisbet

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@MCNisbetNisbet, M.C. & Markowitz, E. (in press). Expertise in an Age of Polarization: Evaluating Scientists’ Political Awareness and

Communication Behaviors. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.

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Framing Judgments and Decisions:

Market Failure & Carbon Pricing Problem?

@MCNisbet

Page 17: Climate Advocacy in the Obama Years: Assessing Strategies for Societal Change

Framing Judgments and Decisions:

Innovation and Societal Resilience Problem?

@MCNisbet

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Who Is a Public Intellectual?

@MCNisbetNisbet 2014

o 1) Write for and engage a broader public on matters of

popular concern, rather than narrowly targeting an expert

audience and emphasizing the more technical details of a

debate.

o 2) Specialize in the synthesis of complex, interdisciplinary

areas of research, engaging in deductive analysis across

cases and events, “working from the top down,” drawing

connections, making inferences, and offering judgments.

o 3) Argue on behalf of causes and policies, serving in the

role of social critic, advocate, or activist.

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Personalities, Celebrities and Global Commodities

@MCNisbet

o Merge public and private selves by relating

complex ideas or problems to personal

anecdotes, “journeys,” “realizations.”

o Appearance, headshot, image, and dress are

likely to be consistent with the subject matter

they write about.

o Establish authenticity, commitment to a topic,

“walks the walk,” “practices what they preach”

or has acquired unique knowledge through

exceptional experiences.

o Most are commodities, in that their books,

writing, and speeches are bound up with a dense

web of promotion, selling, marketing, and

millions of dollars in transactions.

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Public Intellectuals and Wicked Problems:

Creating a Common Language and Outlook

@MCNisbet

o Promote a common storyline about climate change, defining who or

what is to blame, what should be done, and what action would mean for

the future.

o Discourses informally guide the decisions of advocates, funders,

journalists, and governmental officials.

o Define which experts or views might be mainstream versus what

might be contrarian or out of bounds.

o Once assumptions and authorities established, “costly in terms of

human mental labor to re-examine what has finally come to be

taken for granted.”

o Other public intellectuals are needed to “disturb the canonical peace”

and “defamiliarize the obvious” by identifying the flaws in

conventional wisdom and by offering alternative renderings of a

problem.

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Universities and Disruptive Ideas

@MCNisbet

Nisbet, M.C., Hixon, M., Moore, K.D., & Nelson, M. (2010). The Four Cultures: New Synergies for Engaging Society on

Climate change. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 8, 329-331.

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Further Reading

www.climateshiftproject.org/studies

@MCNisbet