Publication

Mar 2010

Climate change has become a top-tier subject for international negotiation and debate, not only for environment specialists but also for people and institutions focused on economics, development, energy, technology, and other pressing international issues. Yet most discussions of institutions and governance for climate change remain narrow. Observers often focus on the negotiation process under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), including the Kyoto Protocol (and more recently the Copenhagen Accord), along with its associated institutions, equating success and failure in combating climate change with success and failure in those arenas. Efforts to broaden the multilateral governance discussion beyond climate-specific forums still tend to emphasize how climate efforts fit within broader environment challenges and institutions.

Download English (PDF, 27 pages, 193 KB)
Author Katherine Michonski, Michael A Levi
Series CFR Working Papers
Publisher Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
Copyright © 2010 Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
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