Risk Perception of Political Leadership toward Climate Change Risk: Applied with the Theory of Planned Behavior

Abstract

As the whole world has faced unprecedented crises including the current COVID-19 crisis, mitigation of climate change risk has been strongly urged. A global community has failed to make distinctive progress to establish a global collective action to mitigate climate change risk. Reflected in the Paris Agreement, a voluntary agreement within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), political leadership plays a central role in policy designs, adoptions, and implementations. This research aims to investigate dynamics of institutional factors that affect political leadership’s risk perception and concrete policy action for climate change risk. This research addresses the following question: To what extent do institutional factors play a critical role in shaping the risk perception of political leadership, in turn, to drive policy adoption? The risk perception of political leadership toward climate change is substantially influenced by international political norms, national industrial interests, and citizens’ opinions for climate change risk. I have developed a complex dynamic simulation model to analyze individual and interactive effects of these multiple institutional factors on the risk perception and policy behavior of political leadership. This understanding ultimately provides the practical policy guidance of how to promote the political leadership to take proactive policy actions for the future.

Presenters

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Yoon Ah Shin

Postdoctoral Fellow

Dr. Yoon Ah Shin is an interdisciplinary public policy researcher whose research integrates social and environmental perspectives to evaluate dynamic interactions between social and environmental systems. Based on the holistic view of a social-environmental coupled system, her focus is on designing and developing policies to mitigate climate change risk, which would ultimately result in collective action mobilized by political and industrial leaderships and citizens. During her postdoctoral research fellowship at SESYNC, she developed a system dynamics model demonstrating interactions amongst...

Image

Yoon Ah Shin

Postdoctoral Fellow

Dr. Yoon Ah Shin is an interdisciplinary public policy researcher whose research integrates social and environmental perspectives to evaluate dynamic interactions between social and environmental systems. Based on the holistic view of a social-environmental coupled system, her focus is on designing and developing policies to mitigate climate change risk, which would ultimately result in collective action mobilized by political and industrial leaderships and citizens. During her postdoctoral research fellowship at SESYNC, she developed a system dynamics model demonstrating interactions amongst environmental and social factors and examining how these interactions affect political leadership’s intention to enact climate mitigation policy. She also led research examining the interdisciplinary research performances and progresses in the field of social-environmental coupled system for the last 20 years. Yoon Ah completed her PhD program at the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Pittsburgh. She received New Carbon Economy Consortium’s Social Science Postdoctoral Fellowship, funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation through the Global Futures Laboratory at Arizona State University. As a postdoctoral fellow, she will continue to develop system dynamics models to create a new carbon governance at Arizona State University for the next two years.

External Links:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/yoon-ah-shin-898156108/

Date
Time
11:00 a.m. ET
Location
This will be a virtual seminar.
This seminar has been recorded.
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