In global climate change politics,China and India have worked closely with each other,representing two big emitters from the developing world.This article reviews Sino-Indian cooperation during four UN climate change negotiations from 2009 to 2012.Their collaboration echoed the perception of neorealism in international relations(IR) studies that states will seek "external balancing" for maximizing national "relative gains".China and India are expected to continue their cooperation on climate change issues when sharing the same structural position as big economies and big emitters,the same pressure in carbon emission reductions,and the same goal of improving living standards for their citizens.Encountering the devastating impacts of climate change and the deadlock in responsibility division in current global climate change governance,this work seeks to shed light on the evolving multilateral governance environment and its complex implications for Sino-Indian relations from an IR perspective.
机构:
Department of Geopolitics and International Relations Old TAPMI Building,Behind Post Office,Manipal UniversityDepartment of Geopolitics and International Relations Old TAPMI Building,Behind Post Office,Manipal University
机构:
Fudan Univ, Inst Int Studies, Ctr Chinese Foreign Policy Studies, Shanghai, Peoples R ChinaFudan Univ, Inst Int Studies, Ctr Chinese Foreign Policy Studies, Shanghai, Peoples R China