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This book explores how a handful of liberal foundations contributed
to establish and orientate the international climate regime.
Looking back at the origins of international climate philanthropy
and its evolution over the past three decades, the author examines
the role of philanthropic foundations in the international climate
debate. The research presented in this book shows that foundations,
through their grant-making and convening activities, are at the
heart of the climate debate. In fact, many credit them with having,
through their activities prior to and at the COP, significantly
contributed to laying the basis for the Paris Agreement in December
2015.
In the field of 'climate change', no terrain goes uncontested. The
terminological tug of war between activists and corporations,
scientists and governments, has seen radical notions of
'sustainability' emptied of urgency and subordinated to the
interests of capital. 'Just Transition' is the latest such
battleground, and the conceptual keystone of the post-COP21 climate
policy world. But what does it really mean? Just Transition emerged
as a framework developed within the trade union movement to
encompass a range of social interventions needed to secure workers'
and frontline communities' jobs and livelihoods as economies shift
to sustainable production. Just Transitions draws on a range of
perspectives from the global North and South to interrogate the
overlaps, synergies and tensions between various understandings of
the Just Transition approach. As the concept is entering the
mainstream, has it lost its radical edge, and if so, can it be
recovered? Written by academics and activists from around the
globe, this unique edited collection is the first book entirely
devoted to Just Transition.
Frequently presented as a historic last chance to set the world on
a course to prevent catastrophic climate change, the 21st
Conference of the Parties to the Climate convention (COP21) was a
global summit of exceptional proportions. Bringing together
negotiators, scientists, journalists and representatives of global
civil society, it also constituted a privileged vantage point for
the study of global environmental governance "in the making". This
volume offers readers an original account of the current state of
play in the field of global climate governance. Building upon a
collaborative research project on COP21 carried out by a
multidisciplinary team of twenty academics with recognised
experience in the field of environmental governance, the book takes
COP21 as an entry point to analyse ongoing transformations of
global climate politics, and to scrutinise the impact of climate
change on global debates more generally. The book has three key
objectives: To analyse global climate governance through a
combination of long-term analysis and on-sight observation; To
identify and analyse the key spaces of participation in the global
climate debate; To examine the "climatisation" of a series of
crosscutting themes, including development, energy, security and
migration. This book will be of great interest to students,
scholars and policymakers of climate politics and governance,
international relations and environmental studies.
Frequently presented as a historic last chance to set the world on
a course to prevent catastrophic climate change, the 21st
Conference of the Parties to the Climate convention (COP21) was a
global summit of exceptional proportions. Bringing together
negotiators, scientists, journalists and representatives of global
civil society, it also constituted a privileged vantage point for
the study of global environmental governance "in the making". This
volume offers readers an original account of the current state of
play in the field of global climate governance. Building upon a
collaborative research project on COP21 carried out by a
multidisciplinary team of twenty academics with recognised
experience in the field of environmental governance, the book takes
COP21 as an entry point to analyse ongoing transformations of
global climate politics, and to scrutinise the impact of climate
change on global debates more generally. The book has three key
objectives: To analyse global climate governance through a
combination of long-term analysis and on-sight observation; To
identify and analyse the key spaces of participation in the global
climate debate; To examine the "climatisation" of a series of
crosscutting themes, including development, energy, security and
migration. This book will be of great interest to students,
scholars and policymakers of climate politics and governance,
international relations and environmental studies.
In the field of 'climate change', no terrain goes uncontested. The
terminological tug of war between activists and corporations,
scientists and governments, has seen radical notions of
'sustainability' emptied of urgency and subordinated to the
interests of capital. 'Just Transition' is the latest such
battleground, and the conceptual keystone of the post-COP21 climate
policy world. But what does it really mean? Just Transition emerged
as a framework developed within the trade union movement to
encompass a range of social interventions needed to secure workers'
and frontline communities' jobs and livelihoods as economies shift
to sustainable production. Just Transitions draws on a range of
perspectives from the global North and South to interrogate the
overlaps, synergies and tensions between various understandings of
the Just Transition approach. As the concept is entering the
mainstream, has it lost its radical edge, and if so, can it be
recovered? Written by academics and activists from around the
globe, this unique edited collection is the first book entirely
devoted to Just Transition.
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