Democracy and the Environment: How Political Freedom Is Linked with Environmental Sustainability
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“We’ll argue that there are two different ways to analyze the relation between the two concepts: on the one hand, freedom being often referred to be in competition with ecological sustainability and the imposed limits it requires and, on the other hand, the impacts in individual’s freedom due to ecological catastrophe if strict limits are not implemented.”
2. Conceptual Building Elements of the Quadruple and Quintuple Innovation Helix Frameworks: Networking Democracy and Ecology for Innovation
“The competitiveness and superiority of a knowledge system or the degree of development of a knowledge system are particularly determined by their adaptive capability and capacity to combine and integrate several and different modes of knowledge and innovation through co-opetition (cooperation and competition), co-evolution and co-specialization’, also of knowledge stock-and-flow dynamics …” (see [7,8] (p. 201); also in relation to ‘Co-Opetition’, see [9]).
“Hence, if the patterns we have observed persist, the world will be better, much better. More people will be living in democracies; they will be wealthier; and they will be enjoying all the benefits that wealth brings, probably including great improvements in public health and medical technology. But not all of us will enjoy this progress. Poverty will still be widespread, dictators will still repress, and wars will still ruin lives” [67] (p. 277).
- Given that democracies respect individual rights, environmentalists may promote and influence decisions about environmental legislation.
- Democratic governments are inherently more responsive to their citizenry, assuring a minimum level of accountability.
- Free flowing information in democracies allows for a form of political learning, including scientific arguments regarding environmental problems.
- Democratic governments are more likely to cooperate with each other insofar as international environmental agencies and treaties are concerned.
- Given that democracies are usually based on free-market economies, businesses can be subject to both environmental incentives and sanctions.
“For the Quadruple and Quintuple Innovation Helix Frameworks, democracy and ecology (environmental protection) are constituting categories, without these a Quadruple and Quintuple Helix innovation system not possible is. To elevate here to next levels, implications could be that climate (as a component and crucial category of ecology), so to say climate itself, is being integrated into understandings of democracy and quality of democracy. ‘Democracy of Climate’ (creating a ‘climate for democracy’, desirably a ‘positive climate’ for democracy), in co-creation with a ‘democracy of knowledge’ (emphasizing a co-evolution of political pluralism and a diversity of knowledge modes in innovation), are referring to new designs and performances of innovation and innovation systems, being furthermore ex-pressed in the principles, building blocks and design of Quadruple and Quintuple Innovation Helix Frameworks. Democracy enables and encourages innovation, and the ecology and cli-mate can act as drivers for further innovation” [1].
3. Empirical Analysis: Linking Political Freedom with Environmental Performance
- Political rights;
- Civil liberties;
- Freedom of the press.
4. Conclusions
“…perhaps the economic successes of non-democracies or autocracies (authoritarian and semi-authoritarian regimes) are being overestimated anyway, because autocracies are also benefitting from the knowledge production and innovation systems of democracies and semi-democracies, so in that sense autocracy is depending on democracy and the knowledge and innovation of democracy in a global system.”
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Geographical Area | Political Freedom Score 1 | Environmental Performance Index 1 |
---|---|---|
East Asia and Pacific | 50.778 | 67.005 |
Europe and Central Asia | 69.391 | 81.639 |
Latin America and Caribbean | 64.259 | 72.360 |
Middle East and North Africa | 30.113 | 67.807 |
North America | 91.724 | 84.890 |
South Asia | 48.685 | 50.005 |
Sub-Saharan Africa | 42.414 | 52.213 |
Geographical Area | Political Freedom Score 1 | Environmental Performance Index 1 |
---|---|---|
High income: OECD | 90.215 | 85.112 |
High income: non OECD | 56.938 | 74.889 |
Upper middle income | 46.864 | 73.209 |
Lower middle income | 45.957 | 60.759 |
Low income | 35.864 | 47.613 |
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Carayannis, E.G.; Campbell, D.F.J.; Grigoroudis, E. Democracy and the Environment: How Political Freedom Is Linked with Environmental Sustainability. Sustainability 2021, 13, 5522. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13105522
Carayannis EG, Campbell DFJ, Grigoroudis E. Democracy and the Environment: How Political Freedom Is Linked with Environmental Sustainability. Sustainability. 2021; 13(10):5522. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13105522
Chicago/Turabian StyleCarayannis, Elias G., David F. J. Campbell, and Evangelos Grigoroudis. 2021. "Democracy and the Environment: How Political Freedom Is Linked with Environmental Sustainability" Sustainability 13, no. 10: 5522. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13105522
APA StyleCarayannis, E. G., Campbell, D. F. J., & Grigoroudis, E. (2021). Democracy and the Environment: How Political Freedom Is Linked with Environmental Sustainability. Sustainability, 13(10), 5522. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13105522