Feedbacks within the climate舑economy system are complex. The research analyzing the relationship between human activities and the climate is considerable, with particular focus on intra-system feedback effects: environmental tipping points, and climate-triggered social tipping points, like migration, to a lesser extent (Kopp et al., 2016; van Ginkel et al., 2018). Due to their cross-disciplinary nature (Guerrero et al., 2018), two-way interactions between the environment and society, whereby movement in either system can trigger inter-system feedbacks (Lade et al., 2013; Yletyinen et al., 2019) as humans respond to a changing environment thereby further changing the environment, have only recently received attention by a growing inter-disciplinary research community. With the aim of improving climate policy and its tools, such as the social cost of carbon, we describe these social舑ecological system (SES) feedbacks and place them in the existing taxonomy for tipping points applied by mainstream climate舑economy models. Drawing lessons from SES research and related interdisciplinary literature, we discuss the value of and method by which to modify social-cost integrated assessment models (SC-IAMs), like Nordhaus' Dynamic Integrated Climate Economy. As it is critical that climate policy include these risks to the stability of the climate舑economy system, we conclude with a research agenda for the identification, quantification, and integration of climate舑society feedbacks into SC-IAMs.
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28 July 2021
Research Article|
July 28 2021
Climate舑Society Feedback Effects: Be Wary of Unidentified Connections Available to Purchase
Peter H. Howard;
Peter H. Howard
Economics Director, Institute for Policy Integrity at New York University School of Law
USA
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Michael A. Livermore
Michael A. Livermore
Edward F. Howrey Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law
USA
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Corresponding author.
Online ISSN: 1932-1473
Print ISSN: 1932-1465
© 2021 P. H. Howard and M. A. Livermore
2021
P. H. Howard and M. A. Livermore
Licensed re-use rights only
International Review of Environmental and Resource Economics (2021) 15 (1-2): 33–93.
Citation
Howard PH, Livermore MA (2021), "Climate舑Society Feedback Effects: Be Wary of Unidentified Connections". International Review of Environmental and Resource Economics, Vol. 15 No. 1-2 pp. 33–93, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/101.00000129
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