Africa in the global climate change negotiations

被引:0
|
作者
Charles Roger
Satishkumar Belliethathan
机构
[1] The University of British Columbia,Department of Political Science
[2] Addis Ababa University,Horn of Africa Regional Environment Centre, College of Natural Sciences
关键词
African Group; Climate change; Negotiations; UNFCCC; Bargaining groups;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The African Group of Negotiators (AGN) has become a much more significant bargaining coalition in the global climate change negotiations. It has been participating more proactively and on a much more significant scale, and, as a result, it has had a greater impact on bargaining outcomes, notably in Nairobi, Copenhagen and Durban. Yet, at present, the group remains poorly understood by both scholars and policymakers. Compared to other groups in the climate negotiations, such as the Group of 77 and Alliance of Small Island States, it has received relatively little attention. This paper fills this gap by tracking the evolution of the AGN over the course of the climate change negotiations. In the early years after the Earth Summit, it shows that the AGN faced tremendous difficulties pursing regional objectives effectively, largely due to a number of “internal” barriers to participation, which compounded the structural barriers that the continent faced by making it difficult to use “low-power” negotiating strategies such as coalition building, agenda-setting and persuasion. However, in recent years, the group has become much more proactive as a result of greater access to material, ideational and institutional resources. These have relieved, somewhat, the internal barriers that the group faced, making it possible for the AGN to negotiate much more confidently and effectively than before.
引用
收藏
页码:91 / 108
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Emerging trends in global climate change negotiations: A developing country perspective
    Barathan, S
    ENERGY AND ECONOMIC GROWTH: IS SUSTAINABLE GROWTH POSSIBLE?, VOLS 1-3, 1997, : 66 - 74
  • [22] Global climate negotiations resume
    Hogue, Cheryl
    CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS, 2021, 99 (26) : 22 - 23
  • [23] Rebuilding the climate change negotiations
    Pernstich, P
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 1999, 33 (14) : 2297 - 2298
  • [24] CLIMATE CHANGE NEGOTIATIONS POLARIZE
    COLLINS, CP
    AMBIO, 1991, 20 (07) : 340 - 344
  • [25] Geneva climate change negotiations
    Cox, JE
    Miro, CR
    ASHRAE JOURNAL, 1996, 38 (09) : 18 - 19
  • [26] Climate science as foundation for global climate negotiations
    Forster, Piers
    Pirani, Anna
    Rosen, Debbie
    Rogelj, Joeri
    Cook, Jolene
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH-CLIMATE, 2023, 2 (02):
  • [27] Water Security in Africa in the Age of Global Climate Change
    Isaacman, Allen
    Musemwa, Muchaparara
    DAEDALUS, 2021, 150 (04) : 7 - 26
  • [28] Managing Climate Change Risks in Africa - A Global Perspective
    Adenle, Ademola A.
    Ford, James D.
    Morton, John
    Twomlow, Stephen
    Alverson, Keith
    Cattaneo, Andrea
    Cervigni, Rafaello
    Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep
    Huq, Saleemul
    Helfgott, Ariella
    Ebinger, Jane O.
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2017, 141 : 190 - 201
  • [29] Trade sanctions, financial transfers and BRIC participation in global climate change negotiations
    Tian, Huifang
    Whalley, John
    JOURNAL OF POLICY MODELING, 2010, 32 (01) : 47 - 63
  • [30] The climate change negotiations: the case for differentiation
    Fisher, BS
    Tulpule, V
    Brown, S
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS, 1998, 42 (01) : 83 - 97