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Think tanks and climate obstruction: Atlas affiliates in Canada.

Nicolas Graham
Published in: Canadian review of sociology = Revue canadienne de sociologie (2024)
This paper provides a longitudinal social network and content analysis of Canadian think tanks affiliated with the Atlas network, analyzing their efforts to obstruct climate action over the last two decades. Network analysis reveals extensive and deepening board interlocks and joint memberships between these think tanks and the fossil fuel industry, other policy-planning organizations within and beyond Canada, and academic institutions. Consistent with and rooted in network ties, Atlas members produce a large and growing volume of climate-related content, including content that denies the reality and impacts of climate change, promotes and defends the fossil fuel sector, and opposes climate policy and action. Atlas affiliates are argued to be at the core of a reactionary segment of Canada's elite policy-planning network opposed to virtually all forms of climate action, while the frames and campaigns they deploy are seen as a force obstructing progress on climate change.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • healthcare
  • single cell
  • public health
  • mental health
  • human health
  • body composition
  • risk assessment
  • network analysis
  • medical students