ISPS ID:
isps25-25
Full citation:
Laura Thomas-Walters, Eric G Scheuch, Abby Ong, Matthew H Goldberg, The impacts of climate activism, Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences, Volume 63, 2025, 101498, ISSN 2352-1546, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cobeha.2025.101498.
Abstract:
We review 50 studies on the impacts of climate activism. We present the existing evidence in a map of what we know about climate activism and its impacts. There is strong evidence that climate activism shifts public opinion and media coverage in a pro-climate direction, but this varies by context and the tactics employed. There is more moderate evidence that activism can pressure policymakers to communicate more about climate change, encourage voters to vote in a more pro-climate direction, and financially pressure carbon-intensive companies. We review suggestive evidence that protest can influence emissions and environmental policy. Although these studies cover a wide swath of outcome variables, a majority examine intermediate variables, rather than long-term impacts. Generalizability is challenged by a bias toward the United States and Western Europe. We call for greater focus outside those geographic areas and more attention to activism’s impact on public policy and emissions.
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Publication date:
2025
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