Competing Climate Cultures in Germany
Variations in the Collective Denying of Responsibility and Efficacy
Abstract
Despite frequent protests and abounding discussions about the subject, climate action measures to counter human-made climate change have so far remained largely ineffective. By identifying profound climate-cultural differences, Sarah Kessler offers an explanation to this issue and shows that conventional assumptions of an implicit consensus on the need to prioritise climate action should be reconsidered. She uncovers climate-cultural variations in (implicit and explicit) denial of climate change and thus challenges existing approaches that treat the German public as a unified entity waiting to be activated by the right kind of rationally convincing information.
Keywords
Culture; Sustainability; Climate Change; Climate Change Responsibility; Social Media; Nature; Environmental Sociology; Environmental Policy; SociologyDOI
10.14361/9783839471432ISBN
9783839471432, 9783837671438, 9783839471432Publisher
transcript VerlagPublisher website
https://www.transcript-verlag.de/Publication date and place
Bielefeld, 2024Imprint
transcript VerlagSeries
Soziologie der Nachhaltigkeit, 4Classification
Social impact of environmental issues
Central / national / federal government policies
Environmental policy and protocols
Environmental economics
Sustainability