Drawing on rigorous analysis of the global climate debate and participant analysis of COP21, this volume will offer readers an original account of the current state of play in the field of global climate governance. It will build upon a collaborative research project on COP21 carried out by a multidisciplinary team of twenty academics.
Drawing on rigorous analysis of the global climate debate and participant analysis of COP21, this volume will offer readers an original account of the current state of play in the field of global climate governance. It will build upon a collaborative research project on COP21 carried out by a multidisciplinary team of twenty academics.
Stefan C. Aykut is a political scientist and sociologist at the Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Sciences Innovations Sociétés (LISIS) at Université Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée, France and an associated researcher at Centre Marc Bloch in Berlin, Germany. Jean Foyer is a political scientist and sociologist at the CNRS-affiliated Institut des Sciences de la Communication (ISCC), France. Edouard Morena is a political scientist and an associate researcher at the CNRS-affiliated Laboratoire Dynamiques Sociales et Recompositions des Espaces (LADYSS), France. He is also a part-time lecturer in French and European Studies at the University of London Institute in Paris (ULIP).
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction. COP21 and the "climatisation" of global debates 1. Governing through verbs: The practice of negotiating and the making of a new mode of governance 2. The necessary and inaccessible 1.5°C objective: A turning point in the relations between climate science and politics? 3. The business voice at COP21: The Quandaries of a Global Political Ambition 4. The ins and outs of climate movement activism at COP21 5. Follow the money: Climate philanthropy from Kyoto to Paris 6. The partial climatisation of migration, security and conflict 7. Climate change, a new "buzzword" for the "perpetual present" of development aid? 8. Objectifying traditional knowledge, re-enchanting the struggle against climate change 9. The end of fossil fuels? Understanding the partial climatisation of energy policy
Introduction. COP21 and the "climatisation" of global debates 1. Governing through verbs: The practice of negotiating and the making of a new mode of governance 2. The necessary and inaccessible 1.5°C objective: A turning point in the relations between climate science and politics? 3. The business voice at COP21: The Quandaries of a Global Political Ambition 4. The ins and outs of climate movement activism at COP21 5. Follow the money: Climate philanthropy from Kyoto to Paris 6. The partial climatisation of migration, security and conflict 7. Climate change, a new "buzzword" for the "perpetual present" of development aid? 8. Objectifying traditional knowledge, re-enchanting the struggle against climate change 9. The end of fossil fuels? Understanding the partial climatisation of energy policy
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