The International Politics of Climate Change

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The International Politics of Climate Change

9781848446908 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Aynsley Kellow, Professor Emeritus of Government, University of Tasmania, Australia and Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen, Emeritus Reader in Geography, University of Hull, UK
Publication Date: 2010 ISBN: 978 1 84844 690 8 Extent: 640 pp
This highly topical collection, edited by two accomplished academics, explores how environmental science and energy policy relate to international politics and policy. This complex and essentially interdisciplinary subject has been the core about which academics have fiercely debated and, as yet, unsuccessfully reached satisfactory negotiations. The editors interpret the politics of climate change as being driven less by scientific understanding than by disguised interests and deeply believed norms. The carefully selected papers in this volume both analyse and advocate policies that claim to be directed towards ‘combating man-made global warming’ and hence ‘save the planet’.

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Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
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This highly topical collection, edited by two accomplished academics, explores how environmental science and energy policy relate to international politics and policy. This complex and essentially interdisciplinary subject has been the core about which academics have fiercely debated and, as yet, unsuccessfully reached satisfactory negotiations. The editors interpret the politics of climate change as being driven less by scientific understanding than by disguised interests and deeply believed norms. The carefully selected papers in this volume both analyse and advocate policies that claim to be directed towards ‘combating man-made global warming’ and hence ‘save the planet’.
Critical Acclaim
‘The erudite account provided by the volume paints a vivid picture of the growing role that the environment plays in the study of international politics. In this respect, the essays included in this collection would be of relevance not only to scholars and students of international relations, but also to those interested in environmental history, comparative politics, and international political economy.’
– CEU Political Science Journal

‘Through a collection of groundbreaking articles, Aynsley Kellow and Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen reveal the full complexity of the global politics of climate change. The focus on science, norms, negotiations, and future prospects provides valuable insights into avoiding potential pitfalls and finding provocative pathways for governing climate change.’
– Peter Dauvergne, University of British Columbia, Canada
Contributors
28 articles, dating from 1989 to 2008
Contributors include: S. Barrett, P. Haas, M. Hatch, D. Lal, B. Martin, R.A. Pielke, Jr., I. Rowlands, C. Sunstein, D. Victor, O. Young
Contents
Contents:

Acknowledgements

Preface
Aynsley Kellow and Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen

Introduction The International Politics of Climate Change: Learning from Failure of Failing to Learn?
Aynsley Kellow and Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen

PART I THE PLACE OF SCIENCE
1. Brian Martin (1988), ‘Nuclear Winter: Science and Politics’
2. Peter M. Haas (1990), ‘Obtaining International Environmental Protection Through Epistemic Consensus’
3. Raino Malnes (2006), ‘Imperfect Science’
4. Roger A. Pielke Jr. (2005), ‘Misdefining “Climate Change”: Consequences for Science and Action’
5. James Hansen, Makiko Sato, Reto Ruedy, Andrew Lacis and Valdar Oinas (2000), ‘Global Warming in the Twenty-First Century: An Alternative Scenario’
6. R.A. Pielke Jr. (1998), ‘Rethinking the Role of Adaptation in Climate Policy’
7. Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen (1997), ‘A Winning Coalition of Advocacy: Climate Research, Bureaucracy and “Alternative” Fuels. Who is Driving Climate Change Policy?’

PART II THE POWER OF NORMS
8. Michael Grubb (1995), ‘Seeking Fair Weather: Ethics and the International Debate on Climate Change’
9. Ian H. Rowlands (1997), ‘International Fairness and Justice in Addressing Global Climate Change’
10. Deepak Lal (1995), ‘Eco-Fundamentalism’

PART III INTERESTS AND THEIR REPRESENTATION
11. S.A. Boehmer-Christiansen, D. Merten, J. Meissner and D. Ufer (1993), ‘Ecological Restructuring or Environment Friendly Deindustrialization: The Fate of the East German Energy Sector and Society Since 1990’
12. Aynsley Kellow (1999), ‘Australia in the Greenhouse: Science, Norms and Interests in the Kyoto Protocol’
13. Sevasti-Eleni Vezirgiannidou (2008), ‘The Kyoto Agreement and the Pursuit of Relative Gains’
14. Michael T. Hatch (1995), ‘The Politics of Global Warming in Germany’
15. David L. Levy and Daniel Egan (1998), ‘Capital Contests: National and Transnational Channels of Corporate Influence on the Climate Change Negotiations’
16. Scott Barrett (1998), ‘Political Economy of the Kyoto Protocol’

PART IV PERSPECTIVES ON NEGOTIATIONS
17. Oran R. Young (1989), ‘The Politics of International Regime Formation: Managing Natural Resources and the Environment’
18. Hugh Ward, Frank Grundig and Ethan R. Zorick (2001), ‘Marching at the Pace of the Slowest: A Model of International Climate-Change Negotiations’
19. Marvin S. Soroos (2001), ‘Global Climate Change and the Futility of the Kyoto Process’
20. Cass R. Sunstein (2007), ‘Of Montreal and Kyoto: A Tale of Two Protocols’
21. David G. Victor (2006), ‘Toward Effective International Cooperation on Climate Change: Numbers, Interests and Institutions’

PART V CRITICAL ASSESSMENTS
22. Bruce Yandle and Stuart Buck (2002), ‘Bootleggers, Baptists, and the Global Warming Battle’
23. Dieter Helm (2008), ‘Climate-change Policy: Why Has So Little Been Achieved?’
24. Scott Barrett (2008), ‘Climate Treaties and the Imperative of Enforcement’

PART VI PROSPECTS
25. Joanna Depledge (2006), ‘The Opposite of Learning: Ossification in the Climate Change Regime’
26. Aynsley Kellow (2008), ‘Lessons Not Learned in Environmental Governance: International Climate Policy Beyond Kyoto’27. Jake Schmidt, Ned Helme, Jin Lee and Mark Houdashelt (2008), ‘Sector-based Approach to the Post-2012 Climate Change Policy Architecture’
28. David G. Victor, Joshua C. House and Sarah Joy (2005), ‘A Madisonian Approach to Climate Policy’
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