Abstract

Globalization significantly influences climate change. Ecological modernization theory and world polity theory suggest that globalization reduces carbon dioxide emissions worldwide by facilitating economic, political, social, and cultural homogenization, whereas ecological unequal exchange theory indicates that cumulative economic and political disparities lead to an uneven distribution of emissions in developed and less developed countries. This study addresses this controversy and systematically investigates the extent to which different dimensions of globalization influence carbon emissions in developed and less developed countries by treating globalization as a dynamic historical process involving economic, political, and social/cultural dimensions in a long-term, cross-national context. Drawing on data for 137 countries from 1970 to 2014, we find that while globalization, social and cultural globalization in particular, has enabled developed countries to significantly decrease their carbon emissions, it has led to more emissions in less developed countries, lending support to the ecological unequal exchange theory. Consistent with world polity theory, international political integration has contributed to carbon reductions over time. We highlight the internal tension between environmental conservation and degradation in a globalizing world and discuss the opportunities for less developed countries to reduce emissions.

Highlights

  • A large body of research has investigated the effects of globalization on carbon emissions [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]

  • Ecological unequal exchange theorists adopt a heterogenization perspective, considering that globalization reinforces the world order in which developed countries (DCs) and less developed countries (LDCs) are systematically different in terms of wealth, power, social structure, and environmental opportunities because of their unequal positions in the world system

  • After accounting for levels of economic development, urbanization, and economic structure, we find that, in general, the pro-environmental influence of globalization has expanded in developed economies, especially since the 2000s, while it gradually declined in LDCs over the four decades

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Summary

Introduction

A large body of research has investigated the effects of globalization on carbon emissions [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. Ecological modernization theory and world polity theory suggest that the homogenizing tendencies facilitated through globalization lead to the institutionalization of environmental culture and practices across the world [6,9,11,12], resulting in lower levels of carbon emissions worldwide. Environmental social scientists embrace the idea that interactions between human society and the natural environment are multiplex in nature [24,25]. Given these considerations, the studies that examine the effect of one aspect of globalization provide valuable insights and detailed empirical evidence, they are likely to largely ignore the holistic effects of globalization as well as the effects of other dimensions of globalization. Variations between different dimensions may lead to contrasting environmental consequences, or cancel out specific effects overall

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