
Strategies of Climate Change Denial: The case of Thierry Baudet
Author(s) -
Roelien Van der Wel
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
marble research papers
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2468-0311
DOI - 10.26481/marble.2019.v1.750
Subject(s) - denial , climate change , politics , epistemology , environmental ethics , populism , political science , sociology , philosophy , law , psychology , psychoanalysis , ecology , biology
This paper discusses different strategies of climate change denial and focusses on the specific case of Dutch politician Thierry Baudet. Much of the literature concerning climate change denial focusses on Anglo-American cases, therefore more research non-English speaking countries is necessary. The theoretical framework describes the state of the art concerning climate change denialism and its links to occurring phenomena in Western societies and politics such as post-truth and populism. Afterwards, by conducting a deductive analysis of Thierry Baudet’s climate denialism in the Netherlands, a more thorough understanding of the different strategies proposed by Stefan Rahmstorf and Engels et al. is reached. Although all four categories are detected in Baudet’s denialism, consensus denial seems to be the most prevalent. The analysis of his usage of the notion of a climate apocalypse, combined with the analysis of his specific focus on consensus denial, broadens the understanding of how climate change denial can relate to populism.