Public Demand for Extraterritorial Environmental and Social Public Goods Provision

Current international efforts to protect the environment and ensure fair working conditions throughout transnational supply chains do not include robust enforcement mechanisms. Democratic accountability is needed to move towards stricter transnational supply-chain management. In their new publication, the researchers of the group have put forth several arguments on the potential drivers of mass public opinion in relation to environmental and social impact policies in supply chains. 

by Najmeh Karimian-Marnani

Vastly increased transnational business activity in recent decades has been accompanied by controversy over how to cope with its social and environmental impacts. The most prominent policy response thus far consists of international guidelines. In this paper, Rudolph et al.  investigate to what extent and why citizens in a high-income country are willing to restrain companies to improve environmental and social conditions in other countries. Exploiting a real-world referendum in Switzerland, they use choice and vignette experiments with a representative sample of voters (N = 3,010) to study public demand for such regulation. Results show that citizens prefer strict and unilateral rules (with a substantial variation of preferences by general social and environmental concern) while correctly assessing their consequences. Moreover, exposure to international norms increases demand for regulation. These findings highlight that democratic accountability can be a mechanism that motivates states to contribute to collective goods even if not in their economic interest and that awareness of relevant international norms among citizens can enhance this mechanism.

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