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In pursuing international order, prosperity and democracy, politics
and political decision-making have contributed to global climate
change issues. Solutions need to be found that go beyond finding
cleaner, newer technologies, revised policies and laws to curb
pollution and carbon production, protecting species and habitats,
or remembering to turn off the lights and put out the recycling.
They need to re-imagine how our rich and complex ways of life are
interconnected with the natural environment. Edmondson and Levy set
out to increase understanding of why it takes so long for
governments and others to agree on how to respond to the challenges
of global climate change, and why it is important for them to
continue to try to do so. They examine why it is so difficult for
the international community to respond to global climate change. In
doing so, they analyse and explain some of the strategies that
might ultimately provide the foundations for appropriate responses.
This book explores the real-world consequences changing ideas and
strategies have on effective climate governance. Its main focus is
on why accountability matters - both for transformations and
transitions in international climate change governance and how
international support for environmentally responsible actions, and
extending shared accountabilities, might strengthen climate
governance globally. A main point of discussion is if and how
better understanding of accountabilities and transformations in
ecosystems dynamics, the capacities of organisms to adapt, migrate
or otherwise respond to environmental or climatic changes, can
improve climate governance mechanisms. Bringing together a diverse
set of considerations from various fields of study, chapters
examine responses to environmental transformations that occur
during periods of climatic crisis, such as species depletion,
industrialisation, de-industrialisation or urbanisation.
Throughout, this book aims to further readers understanding of if
or how accountable climate governance can reduce the risks of
global political disorder and widespread conflict in the 21st
century, arising from environmental transformations of depleted
forests, re-routed waterways, coastlines impacted by sea level
rises, changed rainfall patterns and industrial practices.
Beth Edmondson and Stuart Levy examine why it is so difficult for
the international community to respond to global climate change. In
doing so, they analyse and explain some of the strategies that
might ultimately provide the foundations for appropriate responses.
This book explores the real-world consequences changing ideas and
strategies have on effective climate governance. Its main focus is
on why accountability matters - both for transformations and
transitions in international climate change governance and how
international support for environmentally responsible actions, and
extending shared accountabilities, might strengthen climate
governance globally. A main point of discussion is if and how
better understanding of accountabilities and transformations in
ecosystems dynamics, the capacities of organisms to adapt, migrate
or otherwise respond to environmental or climatic changes, can
improve climate governance mechanisms. Bringing together a diverse
set of considerations from various fields of study, chapters
examine responses to environmental transformations that occur
during periods of climatic crisis, such as species depletion,
industrialisation, de-industrialisation or urbanisation.
Throughout, this book aims to further readers understanding of if
or how accountable climate governance can reduce the risks of
global political disorder and widespread conflict in the 21st
century, arising from environmental transformations of depleted
forests, re-routed waterways, coastlines impacted by sea level
rises, changed rainfall patterns and industrial practices.
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