What drives norm success? Evidence from anti–fossil fuel campaigns

M. Blondeel, J. Colgan, T. Van de Graaf

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

© 2019 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.Why do some international norms succeed, whereas others fail? We argue that norm campaigns are more likely to succeed when the actions they prescribe are framed as a solution to salient problems that potential adopters face, even if different from the problem that originally motivated norm entrepreneurs. For instance, the campaign to reduce environmentally harmful fossil fuel subsidies has been more effective when linked to fiscal stability, a common problem that policy makers face. Problem linkages can thus bolster the attractiveness of a proposed new norm and broaden the coalition of actors that support the norm. We probe the plausibility of this argument by studying two campaigns that aim to shift patterns of finance for fossil fuel production and consumption: subsidy reform and divestment. Subsidy reform encourages governments to reduce subsidies for products like gasoline; divestment encourages investors to sell or avoid equity stocks from fossil fuel industries. We look at the variation in the impact of these two campaigns over time and argue that they have achieved institutional acceptance and implementation chiefly when their advocates have been able to link environmental goals with other goals, usually economic ones.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)63-84
JournalGlobal Environmental Politics
Volume19
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2019
Externally publishedYes

Funding

We are grateful to Harro van Asselt, Fergus Green, Jean-Frédéric Morin, Jakob Skovgaard, and Sanne Verschuren for their very helpful comments on earlier drafts of the article. Earlier versions of this article were also presented at the conference Energy for Society: 1st International Conference on Energy Research and Social Science, April 2017, Sitges, Spain; at the Dynamics of Dissent: Direct and Indirect Contestation Workshop, June 2017, Oxford University; at the ISA Annual Convention, April 2018, San Francisco; and at the workshop Political Economy of Energy Policy: Research Frontiers, October 2018, Princeton University. We thank the organizers and participants of the workshops and panels at these conferences for their valuable feedback, comments, and suggestions.

FundersFunder number
Sanne Verschuren
Princeton University
Oxford University

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