Affiliation:
1. University of Hamburg, Germany
Abstract
How should political leaders address the emerging climate crisis if citizens are reluctant to accept costly but necessary climate action? In this article, I address this question by harnessing insights from the realist tradition in political theory. I propose that the realist legitimacy framework provides action guidance by offering two broadly applicable heuristics for political agents: responsibility and responsiveness. These heuristics collide if citizens are unwilling to accept policies designed to secure a nation's long-term stability. Faced with this problem, some authors make the supposedly realist argument that policymakers in liberal democracies should prioritise responsibility over responsiveness and embrace eco-authoritarianism to address the climate emergency. Against this line of argument, I maintain that the realist legitimacy framework entails no such commitment. Instead, realists must emphasise that responsible climate action entails a sufficient degree of responsiveness. I conclude by sketching how this insight may guide democratic leaders and climate activists in the future.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Reference99 articles.
1. Democracy for Realists
2. Introduction
3. Getting Real about Taxes: Offshore Tax Sheltering and Realism's Ethic of Responsibility
4. Arslanalp S, Koepke R, Sozzi A, et al. (2023) Climate change is disrupting global trade. International Monetary Fund. Available at: https://bit.ly/3N3GhxY (accessed 28 November 2023).