Abstract

One of the effects of globalization is the increasing number of transnational ties that central governments not only ceased to control but also ceased to participate in; therefore, in recent decades, cities have been increasingly motivated to respond to international issues and initiate various contacts with foreign economic, cultural, and political centres. This article examines practices of city diplomacy in light of the current climate crisis. Albeit cities could be in conflict with their central government, they are executing the global climate agenda. Nonetheless, how do we frame cities’ autonomous activities in the global governance agenda? The article seeks to determine whether the framework of hybrid multilateralism is the niche for cities to assume the role of the central government in defending common global values such as preservation of the environment when the state fails to do so. Based on a dataset consisting of various subnational initiatives responding to climate change, we suggest a remarkable growth in the pledges to the international climate agreements’ commitments involving many subnational actors. Through these pledges, cities enter the international negotiations with various partners under hybrid policy architecture.
 Cities hold an enormous potential to influence the global conversation on climate change agenda. Furthermore, we conclude that cities are taking on the states’ role in global issues when they identify the inadequacy of the central governments’ action. Their conflict position forces them to carry out autonomous activities and fosters the new phenomenon of hybrid multilateralism.

Highlights

  • Global complexity is an opening for the vertical disintegration of foreign policymaking

  • The ongoing process of globalization facilitates the involvement of other actors who grasp the opportunity to contribute to the global agenda (Castells, 2005; Kuznetsov, 2015), integrates international society and reduces the salience of borders; cities are recognized as internationally important centres of political and economic power (Sassen, 2001; Acuto, 2010; Curtis, 2014; Rapoport, Acuto, Grcheva, 2019; Amiri, Sevin, 2020)

  • It is argued that city diplomacy is the result of the decentralization of international relations, where states cease to represent the only strong political entities, and cities represented by mayors increase their activity at the international level (Van der Pluijm, 2007: 11; Curtis, 2014: 135; Tavares, 2016)

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Global complexity is an opening for the vertical disintegration of foreign policymaking. The ongoing process of globalization facilitates the involvement of other actors who grasp the opportunity to contribute to the global agenda (Castells, 2005; Kuznetsov, 2015), integrates international society and reduces the salience of borders; cities are recognized as internationally important centres of political and economic power (Sassen, 2001; Acuto, 2010; Curtis, 2014; Rapoport, Acuto, Grcheva, 2019; Amiri, Sevin, 2020) These new actors’ engagement creates a new form of global diplomacy, especially throughout transnational networks, and shapes a parallel to the traditional Westphalian system (Acuto, 2017; van der Pluijm, 2017; Oosterlynck et al, 2019). The growing recognition of transnational city networks by national governments scale up their opportunities to cope with climate change (Bäckstrand et al, 2017) In this context, hybrid multilateralism, defined as cooperation among different actors at different levels, provides links to multilateral negotiations and, together with orchestration, represents a means to harness multiple actors’ disparate activities toward common goals (Dryzek, 2017: 3). The essence of the further debate is to reveal whether cities’ diplomatic practices form new norms in global climate governance under the hybrid architecture

THE CITY DIPLOMACY PRACTICES THEORIZED
HYBRID MULTILATERALISM AS A NICHE FOR CITIES
Findings
HYBRID PRACTICES OF CITIES
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call