Dear colleagues,

Apologies for cross-posting, but I wanted to share a new article that may
be of interest to those working on fossil fuel wealth, political
institutions, authoritarian regimes, and climate change. The title and
abstract are pasted below, and you can access the FirstView version Open
Access here: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1537592724000793.

All the best,

Bill Kakenmaster

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Title: The Fossil-Fueled Roots of Climate Inaction in Authoritarian Regimes

Abstract: Why do some authoritarian regimes contribute more to climate
change than others? I suggest that climate inaction in nondemocracies is
shaped by a combination of fossil fuel wealth and executive constraints.
Fossil fuel wealth undermines climate action by giving leaders of
authoritarian regimes incentives to capture oil and gas rents that help
them maintain power. Executive constraints, however, can restrict
carbon-intensive rent-seeking and therefore moderate the role of fossil
fuel wealth in undermining climate action. This argument provides a novel
explanation for variation in efforts to address climate change among
nondemocracies: the lack of institutional constraints on autocratic
leaders’ use of fossil fuel wealth for political gain. I evaluate this
argument using panel data on greenhouse gas emissions, oil and gas income,
and executive constraints in 108 countries governed by authoritarian
regimes between 1990 and 2021, finding that oil and gas income leads to
higher emissions, but that these effects decline significantly with
executive constraints.

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*Bill Kakenmaster*
PhD Candidate, University of Notre Dame
2060 Jenkins Nanovic Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46657
Email: [email protected]

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