
Climate and Trade Policy
Bottom-up Approaches Towards Global Agreement
Edward Elgar Publishing
Published on 25. May 2007
Book
Hardback
144 pages
978-1-84720-227-7 (ISBN)
Description
The difficulty of achieving and implementing a global climate change agreement has stimulated a wide range of policy proposals designed to favour the participation of a large number of countries in a global cooperative effort to control greenhouse gas emissions. This significant book analyses the viability of controlling climate change through a set of regional or sub-global climate agreements rather than via a global treaty.The authors argue that the principal challenge in devising a truly global architecture is in providing sufficient incentives for all party participation whilst also ensuring compliance, which raises global governance issues. The main purpose of this study is not to trace in detail the process of negotiation and implementation of international regimes, but rather to evaluate whether a series of regional or sub-global agreements is more likely to achieve climate change control than a global agreement attempted from the outset. From a political science perspective, the focus centres on institution building and governance. From an economic perspective it concentrates on incentives used to encourage participation in a global and non-fragmented agreement. Lessons from EU integration and actual global and regional trade agreements are employed in order to analyse the future prospects of climate change negotiations.
The focus on climate change and more generally the management of environmental and resource problems will make this book essential reading for participants, observers and analysts of the public policy process as it concerns climate change and more generally the management of environmental and resource problems. In addition the rich combination of international relations theory and economic literature with findings from the policy process will appeal to both general readers and the academic community.
The focus on climate change and more generally the management of environmental and resource problems will make this book essential reading for participants, observers and analysts of the public policy process as it concerns climate change and more generally the management of environmental and resource problems. In addition the rich combination of international relations theory and economic literature with findings from the policy process will appeal to both general readers and the academic community.
Reviews / Votes
'. . . a timely look at one of the most interesting and relevant issues in current international climate policy. The book is concise and easy to read, making it accessible to a wide range of climate policy specialists.' -- Carbon and Climate Law ReviewMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cheltenham
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-84720-227-7 (9781847202277)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Edited by Carlo Carraro, President, European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (EAERE) and President Emeritus, Ca' Foscari University of Venice, Italy and Christian Egenhofer, Senior Fellow, Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS), Brussels, Belgium and Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Energy, Petroleum and Mineral Law and Policy, University of Dundee, UK
Content
Contents:
Foreword
1. Bottom-up Approaches Towards a Global Climate Agreement: An Overview
Carlo Carraro, Christian Egenhofer and Noriko Fujiwara
2. Regional and Sub-Global Climate Blocs: A Cost-Benefit Analysis of Bottom-up Climate Regimes
Barbara Buchner and Carlo Carraro
3. Do Regional Integration Approaches Hold Lessons for Climate Change Regime Formation? The Case of Differentiated Integration in Europe
Noriko Fujiwara and Christian Egenhofer
4. Trade, the Environment and Climate Change: Multilateral versus Regional Agreements
David Kernohan and Enrica De Cian
5. Participation Incentives and Technological Change: From Top-Down to Bottom-Up Climate Agreements
Barbara Buchner and Carlo Carraro
6. Bottom-up Approaches to Climate Change Control: Some Policy Conclusions
Carlo Carraro and Christian Egenhofer
Index
Foreword
1. Bottom-up Approaches Towards a Global Climate Agreement: An Overview
Carlo Carraro, Christian Egenhofer and Noriko Fujiwara
2. Regional and Sub-Global Climate Blocs: A Cost-Benefit Analysis of Bottom-up Climate Regimes
Barbara Buchner and Carlo Carraro
3. Do Regional Integration Approaches Hold Lessons for Climate Change Regime Formation? The Case of Differentiated Integration in Europe
Noriko Fujiwara and Christian Egenhofer
4. Trade, the Environment and Climate Change: Multilateral versus Regional Agreements
David Kernohan and Enrica De Cian
5. Participation Incentives and Technological Change: From Top-Down to Bottom-Up Climate Agreements
Barbara Buchner and Carlo Carraro
6. Bottom-up Approaches to Climate Change Control: Some Policy Conclusions
Carlo Carraro and Christian Egenhofer
Index