000 01587nam a22001457a 4500
999 _c524629
_d524629
008 240108b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aDeslatte, Aaron
_947529
245 _aMotivated localism: Polarization and public support for intergovernmental carbon reduction efforts
260 _aUrban Affairs Review
300 _a59(5), Sep, 2023: p.1665-1699
520 _aClimate challenges in the 21st century have given rise to re-thinking the role of local governments in confronting larger-than-local challenges. However, anthropogenic climate change has become a weaponized partisan issue, and surveys show a growing partisan tribalization over climate science. Empowering local governments to take broader climate and sustainability actions is one avenue for addressing this. This study tests a localism hypothesis, which holds that citizens will be more supportive of local climate efforts when the benefits are internalized by the community. This deference to locally directed actions springs from the predisposition for decentralization of political authority widely attributed to localism, a directional goal of motivated reasoners which may feed into social identity, cohesion and shared community values. Through three survey experiments, the study finds citizens are more likely to favor continuation of local climate-related programs in the face of high performance and politicization at the federal level. – Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/10780874221109462
773 _aUrban Affairs Review
906 _aCLIMATE CHANGE
942 _cAR