SOLVING CLIMATE | HUMANISTIC PERSPECTIVES FROM MIT

Parrish Bergquist '19 | Climate Change and Civic Opinion

Alumna focuses on identifying the levers for influencing policy, engaging people in policy change, and designing effective climate policies.
 

"The political challenges of addressing climate change are at least as thorny as the technological challenges, though in different ways."

— Parrish Bergquist '19, Post-doctoral Research Associate, Yale Program of Climate Change Communication



Full Series Solving Climate | Humanistic Perspectives from MIT

Also See Fast Forward: MIT's Climate Action Plan for the Decade
 

In this ongoing series, MIT faculty, students, and alumni in the humanistic fields share perspectives that are significant for solving climate change and mitigating its myriad social and ecological impacts. Parrish Bergquist earned her PhD in political science and urban and regional planning from MIT in 2019. Today she is a post-doctoral associate with the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, where her research centers on public opinion about the environment and climate change, policy responsiveness to public opinion, and the implications of political polarization for environmental policy.
 

_____________

 

Q: In what ways are the research, insights, and perspectives from your fields significant for addressing global change and its myriad ecological and social impacts?

Bergquist: The political challenges of addressing climate change are at least as thorny as the technological challenges, though perhaps in different ways. My fields — planning and political science — have contributed valuable insights about why and how decisions are made about climate change, and the consequences of these decisions. I work on these questions from several perspectives: how do our elected leaders engage with environmental policy questions; how does the public engage with these questions; and how does the interaction between the public and elected leaders shape views and decisions?

My work on public attitudes about climate change brings into high relief the differences between an engineer’s and a social scientist’s perspective on the climate challenge. To shift the United States to a cleaner, less carbon-intensive energy system, we need to build a lot of new electricity infrastructure, such as long-haul transmission lines and storage facilities. We have the technology to do this.

Local views about local environments

But in one of my projects, we looked at public receptiveness to a major new power line proposed to carry wind-generated electricity across several states in the Midwest. The proposed power line makes sense from an economic and a technological perspective. The project’s success, however, ultimately depends on residents’ willingness to accept it, and this depends on how the project’s aesthetic, economic, and technological characteristics fit with socially constructed meanings associated with local environments.
 


"I work on these questions: how do our elected leaders engage with environmental policy questions; how does the public engage with these questions; and how does the interaction between the public and elected leaders shape views and decisions?

No matter how technically attractive a particular technology is, its viability for solving the climate crisis ultimately depends on public acceptance."



Broad support for holistic approaches to climate, social, and economic challenges

In another project, my coauthors and I investigated public support for a new political strategy encapsulated in policies like the Green New Deal and New York’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, which passed in 2019. These programs bundle social, economic, and climate policy to directly take on inequities in the burdens imposed by climate change and climate policy.

In our paper, we found broad support for this holistic approach to addressing climate, social, and economic challenges, and we were able to pinpoint specific policies — like electric car mandates or funding for carbon capture technologies — that either expand or reduce support for the overall bundle. These contributions are crucial, because no matter how technically attractive a particular technology is, its viability for solving the climate crisis ultimately depends on public acceptance.

Joining the fields of political science and planning

Political science is about understanding how power is distributed in a society, the mechanisms by which it operates, and its consequences for people’s lives. The planning field applies theories and concepts from political science, other social sciences, and physical sciences to critically assess how decisions about the built environment, natural environment, and social systems will shape the way we can respond to a changing climate. When applied to decision-making about climate change, both fields are contributing insights that are crucial for identifying the levers for influencing policy, engaging people in policy change, and designing and implementing effective climate and energy policies.

The role of financial influence in climate change politics

Political science scholarship assessing the role of money in politics has also changed my perceptions of the political world and climate change as a political issue. Moneyed interests operate in complex and surprising ways, influencing which ideas rise to prominence in political debate, how we understand and discuss issues, who enters and succeeds in politics, and the institutional pathways through which voters and elected officials engage with politics.
 


"What gives me hope? U.S. Americans are increasingly concerned about climate change and are mobilizing. Even young conservatives seem to be thinking differently about this problem than the older generation on the political right. I’m encouraged to see young voters, activists, and politicians prioritizing climate change and linking it to a broader focus on social and economic justice."



Q: What dimensions of the emerging climate crisis affect you most deeply causing uncertainty, and/or altering the ways you think about the present and the future? When you confront an issue as global and formidable as climate change, what gives you hope?

Bergquist: It can be overwhelming to consider the range of potential climate impacts, the uncertainty around how we will adapt, and the distribution of costs and benefits that our adaptation decisions will impose. The science is clear that climate change is happening and human-caused, but scientific projections about its impacts are uncertain, particularly at local scales. In part this is because locally scaled climate impact modeling is difficult, and in part it’s because the impacts of climate change depend on which decisions we take now and in the coming years.

The devastating losses that could occur in both natural and human systems because of storms, floods, and wildfires is deeply concerning to me. I worry about parts of the world where the environment may become uninhabitable and livelihoods untenable, and what will happen to the human, animal, and plant life that inhabits these places.

Young activists, including younger conservatives, are prioritizing climate change 

What gives me hope? Americans are increasingly concerned about climate change, and people are mobilizing as we can see from the advent of groups like the Sunrise Movement and the Fridays for Future demonstrations. These young activists’ passion, courage, principle, and dedication gives me inspiration and hope. Even young conservatives seem to be thinking differently about this problem than the older generation on the political right.

This is evident from a report I wrote recently. In the report, we show that young Republicans are more likely to shift toward understanding that climate change is human caused than to shift toward the party-line skeptical view of the human causes of climate change. I’m encouraged to see young voters, activists, and politicians prioritizing climate change and linking it to a broader focus on social and economic justice.

 

Suggested links

Full Series Solving Climate | Humanistic Perspectives from MIT

Also See Fast Forward: MIT's Climate Action Plan for the Decade
 

Parrish Bergquist website

Yale Program on Climate Change Communication

MIT Department of Political Science

Archive Story: Environmental regulation in a polarized culture
Parrish Bergquist investigates how politics affects environmental decision-making.

Related Story: LobbyView program increases transparency in lobbying.

MIT Energy Initiative | Renewable Energy Sources

MIT Climate

 


Series prepared by SHASS Communications
Office of Dean Melissa Nobles
Series Editor/Designer: Emily Hiestand
Collaborating Editor: Kathryn O'Neill
Publication Associate: Alison Lanier
Published 5 May 2020