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Stranded research? Leading finance journals are silent on climate change

Ivan Diaz-Rainey (), Becky Robertson and Charlie Wilson
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Ivan Diaz-Rainey: University of Otago
Becky Robertson: University of East Anglia
Charlie Wilson: University of East Anglia

Climatic Change, 2017, vol. 143, issue 1, No 18, 243-260

Abstract: Abstract Finance research has shaped the modern financial system, influencing investors and market participants directly through research findings and indirectly through teaching and training programmes. Climate change presents major risks to the global financial system as well as new opportunities for investors. Is climate finance an important topic in finance research? We systematically analyse the content of 20,725 articles published in the leading 21 finance journals between January 1998 and June 2015. We find that only 12 articles (0.06%) are related in some way to climate finance. The three elite finance journals (Journal of Finance, Journal of Financial Economics and Review of Financial Studies) did not publish a single article related to climate finance over the 17.5-year period. We repeat our analysis across a sample of 29 elite business journals spanning accounting, economics, management, marketing and operations research, as well as finance. We find a similar dearth of published climate finance research. We consider four possible explanations for this failure of top finance and business journals to engage with climate finance as a research topic. These include methodological constraints and editorial policies. We conclude by arguing why it is critical for climate-related research to be given greater attention and prominence in finance journals.

Date: 2017
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DOI: 10.1007/s10584-017-1985-1

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