The International Climate Change Regime: A Guide to Rules, Institutions and Procedures
@inproceedings{Yamin2005TheIC, title={The International Climate Change Regime: A Guide to Rules, Institutions and Procedures}, author={Farhana Yamin and Joanna Depledge}, year={2005} }
Foreword Preface and acknowledgments 1. Introduction 2. Overview 3. Regime participants 4. Objective and principles 5. Mitigation commitments 6. Flexibility mechanisms 7. Research, systematic observation, education and public awareness 8. Adaptation 9. Impacts of response measures 10. Finance, technology and capacity-building 11. Reporting and review 12. Compliance 13. Institutions 14. The negotiation process 15. Scientific and technical input 16. Administering the regime 17. Linkages 18…
313 Citations
Policy Subsystems and Regimes: Organized Interests and Climate Change Policy
- Political Science
- 2006
This research is an examination of the role of organized interests in international climate change policy formation. Systematic survey results are used to demonstrate that organized interests…
International Climate Change Policymaking: An Outline of the Post-Paris Framework
- Political Science
- 2018
This paper focuses on some likely multilevel climate policymaking pathways outlining the scenarios for effective global climate regimes. It analyzes the trends of international diplomacy after the…
Evolution of International Environmental Regimes: The Case of Climate Change
- Political Science
- 2014
1. Introductory observations and approach 2. International environmental regimes and their treaties 3. International climate regime 4. Effectiveness of international environmental regimes and…
Power, responsibility, and accountability: Rethinking the legitimacy of institutions for climate finance
- Economics
- 2010
As the December deadline looms to conclude a new agreement under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), negotiators have yet to agree on how to finance cuts in greenhouse gas (GHG)…
Aid Fragmentation and Proliferation: Can Donors Improve the Delivery of Climate Finance?
- Economics
- 2004
Most international agreements addressing development and social issues are set out in nonlegally binding form which, in general, lacks financial mechanisms to assist developing country signatories to…
States, coalitions, and the legalization of the global climate regime: negotiations on the post-2020 architecture
- Political Science
- 2017
ABSTRACT Why do some states and state coalitions, acting within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), support harder legalization of the global climate regime? In order…
Managing Climate Change: The Africa Group in Multilateral Environmental Negotiations
- Economics
- 2013
This paper aims to add to the growing body of knowledge regarding climate change negotiations and the role of African countries. Utilizing regime theory as a foundation, it provides a firm backdrop…
Title Technology Innovation and Climate Change Policy : An Overview of Issues and Options
- Political Science
- 2017
Achieving deep reductions in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions at acceptable social cost will involve far-reaching technological change in the energy and in other sectors. Indeed, at present this seems…
Towards a New Political Economy of Climate Change and Development
- Economics, Political Science
- 2011
In this article, the authors propose a new political economy of climate change and development in which explicit attention is given to the way that ideas, power and resources are conceptualised,…
Which Countries Send More Delegates to Climate Change Conferences? Analysis of UNFCCC COPs, 1995–2015
- Political Science
- 2020
The size of national delegations at the most critical intergovernmental climate change conferences—the annual gatherings of the Conference of the Parties (COPs) of the United Nations Framework…