2022
DOI: 10.3389/fsoc.2022.1021641
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Reflexive Green Nationalism (RGN): A sociological antidote to the climate crisis?

Abstract: What can theories of nationalism and the nation-state tell us about climate change? Much of the available literature, including works by prominent thinkers Ulrich Beck and Bruno Latour, identify it as a collective global challenge rather than a local and national one. But is it really so? This article develops an original theoretical framework integrating the theory of “reflexive modernity”, theories of nationalism, and case studies of green nation-states. The goal is to change the observation point and search… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…While it is true that even in those nationstates that sit at the top of CCPI rankings (see Figure 2) there is much room for improvement. Countries that have been identified as green nation-states (Conversi and Posocco, 2022;Posocco and Watson, 2022b), among them Denmark, Sweden, and Norway are the top performers, and Germany as a relatively high performer, are better placed than others to function as examples to follow. Some cities in these countries have clear goals in place, i.e., Copenhagen aims to be the world's first carbon-neutral capital city by 2025 and Oslo will probably reach net zero emissions by 2030, which is much more than what others are trying to achieve.…”
Section: Theoretical Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While it is true that even in those nationstates that sit at the top of CCPI rankings (see Figure 2) there is much room for improvement. Countries that have been identified as green nation-states (Conversi and Posocco, 2022;Posocco and Watson, 2022b), among them Denmark, Sweden, and Norway are the top performers, and Germany as a relatively high performer, are better placed than others to function as examples to follow. Some cities in these countries have clear goals in place, i.e., Copenhagen aims to be the world's first carbon-neutral capital city by 2025 and Oslo will probably reach net zero emissions by 2030, which is much more than what others are trying to achieve.…”
Section: Theoretical Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most importantly, environmental policy in these nation-states came from the embrace of environmentalism by the political institutions of these nation-states (Conversi and Posocco, 2022). This is a crucial passage from environmentalism to Green Nationalism (Posocco and Watson, 2022b), which could be defined as the institutionalization of environmentalism materializing in national ministries, ministers, policies and regulations. That equals to the lock in of environmentalism, which means that the ideas stemming from the environmental ideology becomes entrenched in social and political systems that help spread it further (McNeill, 2000).…”
Section: Theoretical Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The literature on green nationalism has largely juxtaposed it with resource nationalism (Arantes, 2023; Conversi & Posocco, 2022; Posocco & Watson, 2022b). Resource nationalism is another amalgam of nationalism and here is understood as a political discourse on the politics and economics of resource governance that contends that natural resources belong to the territorial nation in which they reside (Childs, 2016; Koch & Perreault, 2019).…”
Section: The Discursive Nature Of Nationalism and Its Amalgamsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although it is recognised that nationalism's constituent elements are often overlapping and interconnected in their manifestation in the discourse, we treat all three amalgams as conceptually distinctive in order to facilitate a more precise and systematic analysis. For example, while green nationalism and techno‐nationalism may be simultaneously invoked by discussion of renewable energy technologies (see Posocco & Watson, 2022a, 2022b), we categorise such discourse according to whether it emphasises its technologically advanced or climate‐positive features.…”
Section: The Discursive Nature Of Nationalism and Its Amalgamsmentioning
confidence: 99%