Climate Fault Lines

The New Political Economy of a Warming World

Helen V Milner author Alexander F Gazmararian author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Princeton University Press

Publishing:10th Nov '26

£84.00

This title is due to be published on 10th November, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This hardback is available in another edition too:

Climate Fault Lines cover

How the unequal burdens of climate change are reshaping both domestic and international politics

Climate change is no longer an abstraction, as the world experiences extreme heat, rising sea levels, and brutally destructive wildfires. In Climate Fault Lines, Alexander Gazmararian and Helen Milner show that the effects of climate change are far from equal, with the most severe damages concentrated in the world’s hottest regions. They argue that this divide—a fault line that cuts across existing social, economic, and political divisions—will produce diverging political responses to the changing climate. People, businesses, and governments on the more vulnerable side of the fault line are highly motivated to address climate change because they directly experience its intensifying effects. Those on the other side, however, have less motivation to address the problem, and when they do enact climate policy, it’s mainly for other reasons—cleaner air, economic gains, or greater energy security.

Gazmararian and Milner support their argument—which departs from the prevailing wisdom that Northern European states are climate leaders whereas developing nations are free riders—by bringing together models from economics, geosciences and political science. The data show that voters and businesses with the most to lose are reshaping the incentives and policies of local and national governments below the fault line. Unequal harm, not shared global vulnerability, increasingly informs climate politics.

ISBN: 9780691268965

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

256 pages