Transnational Governance Flashcards
What was the difference between Paris and Kyoto?
- Movement away from a blanket, single emission target to a more pledge and review purgative to be reviewed every 5 years
What is in entailed in the shift from international policy to governance?
- Government to governance
- Multiple actors beyond the state are invovled
- New characteristics: adaptive, participatory, cooperative, multi-scalar
Definition of transnational climate change governance?
“When networks operating in the transitional sphere authoritatively steer constitutes towards public goals” (Andonova et al., 2009)
What is Polycentrism?
- Multiple, formally independent centres of decision making authority that operate at multiple scales (Cole, 2011)
- Views decentralisation as positive with organizations operating at local scales with some degree of coordination (Abbott, 2011)
What are the drivers of Transnational Climate Change governance?
- Nature of CC creates political space for diverse actors in governance
- Set within broader context of neoliberalisation and globalization
- First wave led by public sector organisations
- Post Copenhagen emergence of private sector
What phrase by the Japanese Submission for 2006 COP exemplifies transnational climate change governance?
“Shouldn’t we be a little more humble to the awesome might of nature and human action and start exploring many more tools and strategies on top of the Kyoto’s tool box”
Mechansims of TCCG arrangements?
- Urban laboratory – ide that particular that part of city will implement particular projects around climate change initiatives
- What works gets exported to other cities
- Twinning of cities acts as transnational governance at the local level
- Capacity building – strength, skills and resources that organisation need to adapt and develop, e.g. investment in green economy
Geographies of TCCG?
- Not a global phenomenon but has its own distinct geographies
- Developed in Global North but implemented in the South
- Carbon colonialism
What is a regime complex?
- Varied interest in Climate Change means that politics tend to form a regime complex rather than an integratd regime
- More effective than a single integrated instrument
- Creates more flexibility and adaptability
- Positive feeback –> incentives a ‘race to the top’
- UNFCC playing umbrella role to provide legal framework for legal setting, informationa and forum for negotiations
Keohane and Victor, 2011
What are the three types of TCCG approaches?
- Public
- Hybrid
- Private and self-regulation
What are the characteristics of public transnational governance?
- Network of public actors
- Information sharing
- Municipal –> urban labs
- Implementation and capacity building
- Regulatory functions
- Voluntary standard setting
- Compliance achieved both as a result of recognition and through processes of peer pressure and competition
What is the Cities for Climate Protection and what type of TNCCG arrangement is it?
Hoffman, 2011
Public
- Coordinates actions of hundreds of municipalities that pledge to work toward climate change mitigation through a common plan
- Network represents 15% of global carbon dioxide emissions
- Created own arena through development of norms and rules for compliance within goals and targets of the network
What actors are involved in hybrid transnational governance?
- Public and private spheres
- Public-private partnerships
- Bottom up approach
What is REEEP and what type of TNCCG arrangement is it?
Hybrid
- Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Partnership
- Arrangement of governments, international organisations, civil society, acadmeics, private sector, NGOs
- Mission to accelerate global market for sustainable energy by acting as an enabler for transofrming developing countries energy systems
- Addressing developing ctounries are on a path to carbon intense development –> sysstemic climate issues of traditional development
- Between 2002-2012: supported 154 clean energy projects in 57 countries
What is SMART 2020 by the Climate Group and what type of TCCG arrangement is it?
Hybrid
- Look to demonstrate role of ICT sector in mitigating climate change through:
- Smart motor systems
- Smart logistics
- Smart buildings
- Smart grids
- Aim to drive efficiency across global economy of cities and deliver emissions savings fo 15% of global business-as-usual (BAU) emissions in 2020