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Climate change and the welfare state? Exploring Australian attitudes to climate and social policy
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Spies-Butcher, Ben (Author)
- Stebbing, Adam (Author)
Title
Climate change and the welfare state? Exploring Australian attitudes to climate and social policy
Abstract
Despite growing evidence of significant impacts from human-induced climate change, policy responses have been slow. Understanding this policy inertia has led to competing explanations, which either point to the need to build a consensual politics separated from economic partisanship, or which encourage solidarities between environmental and social movements and issues. This article analyses a recent successful mobilisation, leading to the passage of the Clean Energy Act in Australia, to explore the relationship between attitudes to environmental and social protection, particularly among the core constituency in favour of stronger climate action. Using social survey data from the Australian Election Study, the article finds evidence of independent associations between prioritising environmental concerns and support for welfare state expansion, and a realignment of materialist and post-materialist values. This we argue is consistent with Polanyian analysis that posits a link between social and environmental causes based on resistance to commodification.
Publication
Journal of Sociology
Volume
52
Issue
4
Pages
741-758
Date
December 2016
Journal Abbr
Journal of Sociology
Language
English
ISSN
14407833
Short Title
Climate change and the welfare state?
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Spies-Butcher, Ben, and Adam Stebbing. 2016. “Climate Change and the Welfare State? Exploring Australian Attitudes to Climate and Social Policy.” Journal of Sociology 52(4): 741–58.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- clean energy
- climate policy
- climatic changes - government policy
- commodification
- law and legislation
- political attitudes
- social policy
- welfare state
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