Abstract

The traditional political economy account of global climate change governance directs our attention to fundamental collective action problems associated with global public goods provision, resulting from positive or negative externalities as well as freeriding. The governance architecture of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol uses the traditional approaches of international diplomacy for addressing such challenges: legally binding commitments based on principles of reciprocity and (fair) cost/burden sharing via formalized carbon-budgeting. Yet, the 2015 Paris Agreement has essentially abandoned this approach, as it now operates on the basis of internationally coordinated and monitored unilateralism. On the presumption that public opinion matters for government policy, we examine how citizens view this shift in climate policy from reciprocity to unilateralism, after many years of exposure to strong reciprocity rhetoric by governments and stakeholders. To that end, we fielded a survey experiment in China, the world’s largest greenhouse gas (GHG) emitter. The results show that there is, perhaps surprisingly, strong and robust public support for unilateral, non-reciprocal climate policy. To the extent China is interested in pushing ahead with ambitious and thus costly GHG reduction policies, our results suggest that China can leverage segments of public support in order to overcome domestic obstacles to GHG mitigation policies.

Highlights

  • Most global governance efforts take the form of government representatives negotiating an international agreement that specifies the rights and obligations of participating countries

  • The results show that the variance in support for climate policy, as captured by our composite measure based on 11 survey items, is dispersed across all experimental conditions

  • The main purpose of the research presented in this paper was to explore the extent to which citizens support what has recently become the new overall approach to global climate change governance, namely internationally coordinated unilateralism, in the form of INDCs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Most global governance efforts take the form of government representatives negotiating an international agreement that specifies the rights and obligations of participating countries. Efforts to negotiate a successor agreement to the Kyoto Protocol, which ended in 2012, failed and the more than 190 countries involved opted for a radical departure from the hitherto practiced governance approach: through the 2015 Paris Agreement they moved away from legally binding emissions targets, set at the global level, and opted for a much more flexible system. This new Politics and Governance, 2016, Volume 4, Issue 3, Pages 152-171 system bundles unilateral promises by individual countries to engage in greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions. In the jargon of the UNFCCC these promises, which are voluntary and not legally binding, are called INDC, Intended Nationally Determined Contribution

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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