Has neoliberalism undermined climate action? 

Alasdair speaks with Felix Schulz about public opinion on climate policy and why support for environmental measures is declining in the global north.
Share this article...
Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Read more articles like this…

Germany’s 2025 federal election saw the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) double its support to 20.8%, becoming the second largest party, while the Green Party fell from 14.8% to 11.6%. The AfD denies climate science and opposes environmental policies on economic grounds. 

This week, Alasdair interviews academic Felix Schulz, whose recent research has examined public attitudes toward climate policy across six countries three in the global north and three in the global south.  

The research found that core values – particularly those derived from neoliberalism and free-market ideology – are more effective than socioeconomic factors in indicating how people will respond to climate policies.  

Felix and Alasdair discuss how neoliberal thinking has shaped public opinion, why climate policy must integrate social and economic considerations, and how job security concerns in industrial roles affect political support for climate action. 

Felix Schulz is a postdoctoral research fellow at Lund University researching public opinion and climate policy.  

Further reading:

  • People with neoliberal views are less likely to support climate-friendly policies, 2025, The Conversation 
  • Public support for climate policies and its ideological predictors across countries of the Global North and Global South, 2025, Ecological Economics 
  • Navigating sustainable futures: The role of terminal and instrumental values, 2024, Ecological Economics 
  • German elections: why most political parties aren’t talking about the climate crisis, 2025,   The Conversation 

All podcasts:

We believe in sharing information - but not yours.

Our funding comes from nonprofit foundations, not from selling your browsing data to companies. So we don't have a huge list of third parties for you to reject cookies from!

We only use necessary cookies for our website to function, and record aggregate data to keep track of our readership figures. We don’t store or share IP addresses visiting the front-end of our site.

If you sign up to our newsletter, we’ll safely store your contact details to use for that purpose, but otherwise, we only use necessary cookies for our website to function, and record aggregate data to keep track of our readership figures. We don’t store or share IP addresses visiting the front-end of our site.