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The authors examine how far internal policies in the European Union
move towards the objective of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in
the EU by 80-95 per cent by 2050, and how or whether the EU's 2050
objective to 'decarbonise' could affect the EU's relations with a
number of external energy partners.
Climate change is a cross-cutting, long-term, global problem that
presents policymakers with many challenges in their efforts to
respond to the issue. Integrating climate policy objectives into
the elaboration and agreement of policy measures in other sectors
represents one promising method for ensuring coherent policies that
respond adequately to the climate change challenge. This book
explores the integration of long-term climate policy objectives
into EU energy policy. It engages in-depth empirical analysis on
the integration of climate policy objectives into renewable energy
policy; energy performance of buildings; and policies in support of
natural gas importing infrastructure. The book describes
insufficient levels of climate policy integration across these
areas to achieve the long-term policy goals. A conceptual framework
to find reasons for insufficient integration levels is developed
and applied. This book is a valuable resource for students,
researchers, academics and policymakers interested in
environmental, climate change and energy policy development in the
EU, particularly from the perspective of long-term policy
challenges. The book adds to scholarly literature on policy
integration and EU integration, and contributes to new and
developing research about EU decarbonisation.
Climate change is a cross-cutting, long-term, global problem that
presents policymakers with many challenges in their efforts to
respond to the issue. Integrating climate policy objectives into
the elaboration and agreement of policy measures in other sectors
represents one promising method for ensuring coherent policies that
respond adequately to the climate change challenge. This book
explores the integration of long-term climate policy objectives
into EU energy policy. It engages in-depth empirical analysis on
the integration of climate policy objectives into renewable energy
policy; energy performance of buildings; and policies in support of
natural gas importing infrastructure. The book describes
insufficient levels of climate policy integration across these
areas to achieve the long-term policy goals. A conceptual framework
to find reasons for insufficient integration levels is developed
and applied. This book is a valuable resource for students,
researchers, academics and policymakers interested in
environmental, climate change and energy policy development in the
EU, particularly from the perspective of long-term policy
challenges. The book adds to scholarly literature on policy
integration and EU integration, and contributes to new and
developing research about EU decarbonisation.
The concept of political representation has expanded beyond the
classical relationship between representative and the represented
to encompass advocacy, group identities, non-human voices, future
generations, non-democratic systems, symbols, virtual
representation and broader interests. As such, literature on
political representation stems from a wide range of viewpoints and
scholarly traditions, with different norms and assumptions built
in. This volume aims to map and critique the 'edges' of political
representation. By moving from a discussion in the classical
electoral literature through feminist perspectives to different
levels of representation, different understandings of who is
represented and onto empirical studies of symbolic and virtual
representation through participation, the contributions in this
book provide a nuanced assessment while also presenting future
avenues for research that go beyond the mainstream of research on
political representation. Taken together, the chapters provide a
wide vista of political representation across several
sub-disciplines in political science (political theory, political
philosophy, party politics, electoral politics, feminism, European
politics, minority politics, online governance etc.), and also open
up new research avenues through a thorough investigation and
critique of political representation in scholarship.
The concept of political representation has expanded beyond the
classical relationship between representative and the represented
to encompass advocacy, group identities, non-human voices, future
generations, non-democratic systems, symbols, virtual
representation and broader interests. As such, literature on
political representation stems from a wide range of viewpoints and
scholarly traditions, with different norms and assumptions built
in. This volume aims to map and critique the 'edges' of political
representation. By moving from a discussion in the classical
electoral literature through feminist perspectives to different
levels of representation, different understandings of who is
represented and onto empirical studies of symbolic and virtual
representation through participation, the contributions in this
book provide a nuanced assessment while also presenting future
avenues for research that go beyond the mainstream of research on
political representation. Taken together, the chapters provide a
wide vista of political representation across several
sub-disciplines in political science (political theory, political
philosophy, party politics, electoral politics, feminism, European
politics, minority politics, online governance etc.), and also open
up new research avenues through a thorough investigation and
critique of political representation in scholarship.
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