| Literature DB >> 31007288 |
Steven Bernstein1, Matthew Hoffmann1.
Abstract
The Paris Agreement of 2015 marks a formal shift in global climate change governance from an international legal regime that distributes state commitments to solve a collective action problem to a catalytic mechanism to promote and facilitate transformative pathways to decarbonization. It does so through a system of nationally determined contributions, monitoring and ratcheting up of commitments, and recognition that the practice of climate governance already involved an array of actors and institutions at multiple scales. In this article, we develop a framework that focuses on the politics of decarbonization to explore policy pathways and mechanisms that can disrupt carbon lock-in through these diverse, decentralized responses. It identifies political mechanisms-normalization, capacity building, and coalition building-that contribute to the scaling and entrenchment of discrete decarbonization initiatives within or across jurisdictions, markets, and practices. The role for subnational (municipal, state/provincial) climate governance experiments in this new context is especially profound. Drawing on such cases, we illustrate the framework, demonstrate its utility, and show how its political analysis can provide insight into the relationship between climate governance experiments and the formal global response as well as the broader challenge of decarbonization.Entities:
Keywords: Climate governance experiments; Climate policy; Decarbonization; Global climate regime; Subnational climate politics
Year: 2018 PMID: 31007288 PMCID: PMC6445480 DOI: 10.1007/s11077-018-9314-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Policy Sci ISSN: 0032-2687
Fig. 1Decarbonization pathway in a targeted part of the system
Fig. 2Decarbonization pathways across sub-systems
Indicators of scaling and entrenchment in subnational climate governance.
Source: Adapted from van der Ven et al. (2017)
| Type of scaling | Indicator | Types of entrenchment | Indicator |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simple | Attracted more members, expanded in geographic scope, or accumulated more resources? | Lock-in | Use mechanisms that gave it immediate durability? |
| Self-organized | Inspired symbiotic interventions? | Self-reinforcing | Become more difficult to reverse over time? |
| Positive-feedback | Attract non-target members thereby reinforcing the decisions of early adopters? | ||
| Modular | Been consciously emulated in a different context? | Increasing returns | Do the benefits to participants from the intervention increase when more participants are brought on board or the longer the intervention is in place? |