Climate Games
External Review of Whole Manuscript
Experiments on How People Prevent Disaster
Author(s)
Andrews, Talbot M.
Delton, Andrew W.
Kline, Reuben
Language
EnglishAbstract
Can humanity work together to mitigate the effects of climate change? Climate Games argues we can. This book brings together a decade and a half of experimentation, conducted by researchers around the world, which shows that people can and will work together to prevent disasters like climate change. These experiments, called economic games, put money on the line to create laboratory disasters. Participants must work together by spending a bit of money now to prevent themselves from losing even more money in the future. Will people sacrifice their own money to prevent disaster? Can people make wise decisions? And can people decide wisely on behalf of others? The answer is a resounding yes. Yet real climate change is a complex social dilemma involving the world’s nearly eight billion inhabitants. In the real world, the worst effects of climate change are likely to be felt by developing countries, while most of the decisions will be made by rich, industrialized countries. And while the world as a whole would be better off if all nations reduced their greenhouse gas emissions, any given nation could decide it would be even better off if it continued emitting and let other nations take care of the problem. These disaster experiments test how real people respond to climate change’s unique constellation of challenges and deliver a positive message: People will prevent disaster.
Keywords
Climate change, disaster, experiment, economic games, public goods, social dilemma, threshold public goods, geoengineering, climate change mitigation, cooperation, lab experiments, common pool resource, behavioral economics, intergenerational, political economy, emissions, environmental politics, environmental psychology, altruism, help, international, laboratory experiment, investingDOI
10.3998/mpub.12089759ISBN
9780472904297, 9780472076635, 9780472056637, 9780472904297Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
https://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2024Imprint
University of Michigan PressClassification
Politics and government
Environmental policy and protocols
Climate change
Environmental economics
Game theory