Stockholm university

Research project Welfare state responses to social risks in times of climate change

This project is part of an international consortium (WELRISCC) that aims to investigate from a comparative perspective how different European welfare states respond to challenges related to ensuring environmental sustainability while also enhancing people’s well-being.

Uniformed personell working at the docks in a snow-storm
Photo: Mostphotos

Climate change demands a societal transition that ensures environmental sustainability while simultaneously enhancing human well-being. This project aims to advance knowledge on how different European welfare states respond to these challenges and vary in their capacity to address the social risks generated by the current environmental transition. The focus is on “new” social risks associated with climate change, with a key distinction between a) direct risks (arising from immediate threats like droughts or floods) and b) indirect social risks (resulting from policy measures to mitigate climate change, such as the regressive impacts of carbon taxes that disproportionately affect low-income earners).

The project adopts a comparative welfare-state perspective, positing that countries' approaches to these risks are shaped by established institutions, interests, and ideas that have evolved within each nation’s welfare, economic, and environmental systems. The aim is both to map the landscape of responses to social risks related to climate change and to explain this variation by developing new theoretical frameworks for future studies on the interplay between climate change, welfare states, and well-being.
 

Project members

Project managers

Arvid Lindh

Researcher

Swedish Institute for Social Research
Arvid Lindh SU

Members

Kenneth Tommy Nelson

Professor

Swedish Institute for Social Research
Professor Kenneth Nelson

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