https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167268126000181

*Authors: *Anthony Harding, Juan Moreno-Cruz

*30 January 2026*

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2026.107430

*Abstract*
We propose a theory of climate-policy foreign intervention in which the
climate policy is characterized in a policy externality space spanned by
differences between two countries exposure to foreign policy, exposure
divergence, and in preferred policy levels, preference asymmetry. Within
this framework, we show that strategic behavior such as free-riding and
free-driving emerge as equilibrium outcomes of position in this policy
externality space, rather than as intrinsic features of a climate policy
technology, such as *mitigation, adaptation, or geoengineering. *We also
examine preferences for foreign intervention when a hegemon has three
options to intervene in the domestic climate policy of a potential Target:
i.) Agreements with Extraction; ii.) Agreements with Rewards; and iii.)
Agreements with Sanctions. The hegemon’s choice is determined by the
availability of rents that can be extracted from the target country, which
is, in turn, a function of the policy externality. This explains why the
same technology may require different governance approaches in different
contexts and why some climate policies attract foreign intervention while
others do not.

*Source: ScienceDirect *

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