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From niches to norms: the promise of social tipping interventions to scale climate action

Pizziol, Veronica and Tavoni, Alessandro ORCID: 0000-0002-2057-5720 (2024) From niches to norms: the promise of social tipping interventions to scale climate action. npj Climate Action, 3 (1). ISSN 2731-9814

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Identification Number: 10.1038/s44168-024-00131-3

Abstract

The net-zero transition poses unprecedented societal challenges that cannot be tackled with technology and markets alone. It requires complementary behavioral and social change on the demand side. Abandoning entrenched detrimental norms, including those that perpetuate the fossil-fueled lock-in, is notoriously difficult, preventing change and limiting policy efficacy. A nascent literature tackles social tipping interventions—STI, aiming at cost-effective disproportionate change by pushing behaviors past an adoption threshold beyond which further uptake is self-reinforcing. Intervening on target groups can greatly reduce the societal cost of a policy and thus holds promise for precipitating change. This article takes stock of the potential of STI to scale climate action by first reviewing the theoretical insights arising from behavioral public policy based on applications of threshold models from sociology and economics; then, it assesses the initial evidence on the effectiveness of STI, in light of the outcomes of laboratory and online experiments that were designed to study coordination on an emergent alternative to the initial status quo. Lastly, the article identifies potential conceptual limitations and proposes fruitful avenues for increasing the robustness of STI assessments beyond theory and small-scale experimentation.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: © 2024 The Author(s)
Divisions: Grantham Research Institute
Subjects: B Philosophy. Psychology. Religion > BF Psychology
H Social Sciences > HM Sociology
G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > GE Environmental Sciences
Date Deposited: 16 Jan 2025 10:48
Last Modified: 16 Jan 2025 10:48
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/126894

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