Replication material for: Climate Change Policy Preferences and Foreign State Behavior - Survey Experimental Evidence on Reciprocal Defection
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Replication data and code for publication "Climate Change Policy Preferences and Foreign State Behavior - Survey Experimental Evidence on Reciprocal Defection" in Climatic Change.
Abstract: The Paris Agreement emphasizes transparency over individual country targets and achievements as a coordination instrument for `ratcheting up' global climate policy. Does free-riding of third countries affect public support for domestic climate policy? Citizens could reciprocate defection, but only if free-riding concerns are a binding constraint on public support. Prior literature indicates that reciprocity considerations matter for agreement-making or specific climate policy support. Building on this literature and drawing on high-quality population-representative survey experiments in Switzerland (N=3,464), I instead focus on how citizens react to the defection of important emitters from target achievement. I show that citizens reciprocate strongly, reducing support for ratcheting up, but also for basic compliance with current Swiss targets. Respondents with anti-climate-policy attitudes and high perceived ego- or sociotropic economic burden from the Green Transition show a particularly strong reduction in support, while I find no indication that defection induces a counterbalancing logic among most-likely subgroups. These results indicate that distributional and free-riding concerns interact, and that forming pro-climate coalitions might become more difficult when foreign countries fail to implement their Paris targets.
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- Dataset: 10.23662/FORS-DS-1220-2 (DOI)
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- Stata