Great Powers, Climate Change, and Global Environmental Responsibilities (e-bog) af -
Buzan, Barry (redaktør)

Great Powers, Climate Change, and Global Environmental Responsibilities e-bog

729,17 DKK (inkl. moms 911,46 DKK)
This book is the first of its kind to examine the role of great powers in the international politics of climate change. It develops a novel analytical framework for studying environmental power in international relations, what counts as a great power in the environmental field, and what their special environmental responsibilities are. In doing so, the book connects International Relations (IR)...
E-bog 729,17 DKK
Forfattere Buzan, Barry (redaktør)
Forlag OUP Oxford
Udgivet 10 januar 2022
Længde 304 sider
Genrer International relations
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9780192635730
This book is the first of its kind to examine the role of great powers in the international politics of climate change. It develops a novel analytical framework for studying environmental power in international relations, what counts as a great power in the environmental field, and what their special environmental responsibilities are. In doing so, the book connects International Relations (IR) debates on power inequality, great powers and great power management,with global environmental politics (GEP) scholarship. The book brings together leading scholars in IR and GEP whose contributions focus on major environmental powers (United States, China, European Union, India, Brazil, Russia) and international institutions and issue areas (UN Security Council, multilateral environmental agreements, international climate leadership, coal politics). The contributors to this volume examine how individual great powers have responded to the global climate challenge and whether they have accepted a specialresponsibility for stabilizing the global climate. They place emerging discourses on great power responsibility in the context of wider debates about international environmental leadership and climate change securitization. And they provide new insights into how international power inequality intersects withthe global ecological crisis, and what special role great powers could and should play in the international fight against global warming.