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Conclusions: Options for Effective Climate Governance beyond 2012

Biermann, Frank ; Pattberg, Philipp and Zelli, Fariborz LU orcid (2010) p.306-323
Abstract
The diversity of the contributions to this volume illustrates the complexity of the challenge. Climate change is a governance problem that needs to be analysed, and addressed, at multiple levels, in multiple sectors, and with a view to multiple actors. In searching for policy options that go beyond current negotiations, the contributions thus addressed issues as diverse as international carbon markets, overlaps between the climate convention and world trade law, the role of non-state actors in technological change, climate refugees, or the vulnerability of the poorest of the poor. The chapters approached these issues from a variety of methodological approaches, showing that the governance challenge of global climate change can be framed... (More)
The diversity of the contributions to this volume illustrates the complexity of the challenge. Climate change is a governance problem that needs to be analysed, and addressed, at multiple levels, in multiple sectors, and with a view to multiple actors. In searching for policy options that go beyond current negotiations, the contributions thus addressed issues as diverse as international carbon markets, overlaps between the climate convention and world trade law, the role of non-state actors in technological change, climate refugees, or the vulnerability of the poorest of the poor. The chapters approached these issues from a variety of methodological approaches, showing that the governance challenge of global climate change can be framed very differently. The diversity of the contributions to this volume illustrates the complexity of the challenge. Climate change is a governance problem that needs to be analysed, and addressed, at multiple levels, in multiple sectors, and with a view to multiple actors. In searching for policy options that go beyond current negotiations, the contributions thus addressed issues as diverse as international carbon markets, overlaps between the climate convention and world trade law, the role of non-state actors in technological change, climate refugees, or the vulnerability of the poorest of the poor. The chapters approached these issues from a variety of methodological approaches, showing that the governance challenge of global climate change can be framed very differently. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Kyoto Protocol, UNFCCC, Climate governance, global governance, fragmentation, complexity, institutional analysis, institutional theory, Mitigation, Adaptation
host publication
Global Climate Governance Beyond 2012. Architecture, Agency and Adaptation.
pages
306 - 323
publisher
Cambridge University Press
ISBN
978-0-521-19011-4
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
1f36158f-ceda-4389-afcb-23455ba99f29 (old id 2374495)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:35:41
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:59:39
@inbook{1f36158f-ceda-4389-afcb-23455ba99f29,
  abstract     = {{The diversity of the contributions to this volume illustrates the complexity of the challenge. Climate change is a governance problem that needs to be analysed, and addressed, at multiple levels, in multiple sectors, and with a view to multiple actors. In searching for policy options that go beyond current negotiations, the contributions thus addressed issues as diverse as international carbon markets, overlaps between the climate convention and world trade law, the role of non-state actors in technological change, climate refugees, or the vulnerability of the poorest of the poor. The chapters approached these issues from a variety of methodological approaches, showing that the governance challenge of global climate change can be framed very differently. The diversity of the contributions to this volume illustrates the complexity of the challenge. Climate change is a governance problem that needs to be analysed, and addressed, at multiple levels, in multiple sectors, and with a view to multiple actors. In searching for policy options that go beyond current negotiations, the contributions thus addressed issues as diverse as international carbon markets, overlaps between the climate convention and world trade law, the role of non-state actors in technological change, climate refugees, or the vulnerability of the poorest of the poor. The chapters approached these issues from a variety of methodological approaches, showing that the governance challenge of global climate change can be framed very differently.}},
  author       = {{Biermann, Frank and Pattberg, Philipp and Zelli, Fariborz}},
  booktitle    = {{Global Climate Governance Beyond 2012. Architecture, Agency and Adaptation.}},
  isbn         = {{978-0-521-19011-4}},
  keywords     = {{Kyoto Protocol; UNFCCC; Climate governance; global governance; fragmentation; complexity; institutional analysis; institutional theory; Mitigation; Adaptation}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{306--323}},
  publisher    = {{Cambridge University Press}},
  title        = {{Conclusions: Options for Effective Climate Governance beyond 2012}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/36166613/Conclusions_p306_323.pdf}},
  year         = {{2010}},
}