Author (Person) | Bäckstrand, Karin, Elgström, Ole |
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Series Title | Journal of European Public Policy |
Series Details | Vol.20, No.10, October 2013, p1369-1386 |
Publication Date | October 2013 |
ISSN | 1350-1763 |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
Abstract: We start with two puzzles: first, how to explain the European Union (EU)'s decline as a climate change leader at the Copenhagen summit? Second, how to understand the partial revival of its leadership position at the Durban climate summit? We advance a twofold explanation, focusing on changes in relative power relations among major powers but also on negotiation strategies and coalition building. In Copenhagen, the EU had a normative agenda and unrealistic expectations and thereby failed to forge any bridge-building coalitions. In Durban, it had moved towards a pragmatic strategy, attuned to the realities of changing power constellations. The EU approached developing countries that shared its desire for a legally binding regime covering all major emitters and probed compromises with veto players, such as China and the US. This bridge-building strategy was combined with a conditional pledge to agree to an extension of the Kyoto Protocol. In sum, the EU acted as a ‘leadiator’, a leader-cum-mediator. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/ |
Subject Categories | Environment |
Countries / Regions | Europe |