2021
DOI: 10.1093/socpro/spab036
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Populism and Carbon Tax Justice: The Yellow Vest Movement in France

Abstract: Scholars cite right-wing authoritarian and business-elite influences in their explanations of populist mobilization against climate reforms. The Yellow Vest movement in France, initially sparked by opposition to a carbon tax, defies the generalizations offered by scholars, the media, and politicians alike. This populist movement emerged from below rather than from elite sponsorship and was motivated by social justice concerns. Through in-depth interviews with 31 Yellow Vest activists as well as supplementary p… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Though the EU is a global leader on climate change and member states generally comply with environmental regulations (Börzel and Buzogány, 2019), the EU has also experienced substantial challenges to climate governance. There are high tensions between national and supranational environmental interests (Driscoll, 2021b; Zito, 2005), EU institutions increasingly outsource environmental enforcement to nongovernmental organizations (Hofmann, 2019) and nationalist movements like the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the EU (Brexit) undermine climate reforms at both the EU and national levels (Burns et al, 2019). My findings suggest that challenges in climate governance are, in part, due to the asymmetries amongst European growth regimes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Though the EU is a global leader on climate change and member states generally comply with environmental regulations (Börzel and Buzogány, 2019), the EU has also experienced substantial challenges to climate governance. There are high tensions between national and supranational environmental interests (Driscoll, 2021b; Zito, 2005), EU institutions increasingly outsource environmental enforcement to nongovernmental organizations (Hofmann, 2019) and nationalist movements like the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the EU (Brexit) undermine climate reforms at both the EU and national levels (Burns et al, 2019). My findings suggest that challenges in climate governance are, in part, due to the asymmetries amongst European growth regimes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, many actors came from the working and lower-middle class, experienced day-to-day economic difficulties, were in debt, and felt excluded from political institutions (Bantigny, 2019). Hence, although initially about opposing the gas tax, the movement’s grievances encompassed broader topics, such as purchasing power, social and fiscal justice, or the implementation of participatory democratic practices and control of representatives (Collectif d’enquête sur les Gilets Jaunes, 2019; Driscoll, 2023; Jeanpierre, 2019). The French government initially answered various yellow vest claims.…”
Section: The Study Context and Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Income tax reduction was the chosen method of revenue recycling in Finland and Sweden, while France operates corporate tax reduction. This suggests that national political contexts in legislating carbon tax vary from one another, effectively diverging into different 'types' of carbon tax, or akin to comparing 'welfare states' (Driscoll, 2023).…”
Section: Determinants Of Public Support For Carbon Taxmentioning
confidence: 99%