The multifaceted nature of global climate change negotiations

被引:0
|
作者
Benjamin E. Bagozzi
机构
[1] University of Minnesota,
来源
The Review of International Organizations | 2015年 / 10卷
关键词
Climate change; International cooperation; UNFCCC; F53; F55;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
International climate change negotiations primarily occur during annual Conferences of the Parties (COPs) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and currently involve virtually every country in the world. What effect does such a large and heterogeneous group of states have on the complexity of climate change negotiations? Would a smaller, more homogenous, assortment of countries produce a more efficient negotiation space? To begin to answer these questions, I apply Latent Dirichlet Allocation to a corpus of High-level climate change conference speeches, covering the formal statements made by country-representatives at the 16th-to-19th COPs. This exercise yields a very large and coherent set of latent topics and many, but not all, of these topics correspond to the negotiating positions presumed by extant research. Analysis of the resultant topics reveals that the dominant dimensions of climate change negotiation favor developing country concerns over cooperation, though reducing negotiations to a smaller core group of countries may lessen this disparity. Together these findings indicate that unsupervised topic models can substantially expand our understandings of climate change negotiations, and international cooperation more generally.
引用
收藏
页码:439 / 464
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] China and India’s participation in global climate negotiations
    Sean Walsh
    Huifang Tian
    John Whalley
    Manmohan Agarwal
    International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics, 2011, 11 : 261 - 273
  • [32] Global recognition of the importance of nature-based solutions to the impacts of climate change
    Seddon, Nathalie
    Daniels, Elizabeth
    Davis, Rowan
    Chausson, Alexandre
    Harris, Rian
    Hou-Jones, Xiaoting
    Huq, Saleemul
    Kapos, Valerie
    Mace, Georgina M.
    Rizvi, Ali Raza
    Reid, Hannah
    Roe, Dilys
    Turner, Beth
    Wicander, Sylvia
    GLOBAL SUSTAINABILITY, 2020, 3
  • [33] Climate change stress alleviation through nature based solutions: A global perspective
    Adil, Muhammad
    Yao, Zijie
    Zhang, Cheng
    Lu, Siqi
    Fu, Shenglei
    Mosa, Walid F. A.
    Hasan, Mohamed E.
    Lu, Heli
    FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 2022, 13
  • [34] Global inequities and political borders challenge nature conservation under climate change
    Titley, Mark A.
    Butchart, Stuart H. M.
    Jones, Victoria R.
    Whittingham, Mark J.
    Willis, Stephen G.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2021, 118 (07)
  • [35] Responsibilities in Transition: Emerging Powers in the Climate Change Negotiations
    Hochstetler, Kathryn
    Milkoreit, Manjana
    GLOBAL GOVERNANCE, 2015, 21 (02) : 205 - 226
  • [36] Quantifying flexibility in combating climate change: modelling the implications of flexibility mechanisms in the climate change negotiations
    Vrolijk, C
    Grubb, M
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENT AND POLLUTION, 1999, 11 (04) : 495 - 524
  • [37] Pluralising climate change solutions? Views held and voiced by participants at the international climate change negotiations
    Nasiritousi, Naghmeh
    Hjerpe, Mattias
    Buhr, Katarina
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2014, 105 : 177 - 184
  • [38] Inside UN Climate Change Negotiations: The Copenhagen Conference
    Dimitrov, Radoslav S.
    REVIEW OF POLICY RESEARCH, 2010, 27 (06) : 795 - 821
  • [39] Buffering Climate Change with Nature
    Hessen, Dag O.
    Vandvik, Vigdis
    WEATHER CLIMATE AND SOCIETY, 2022, 14 (02) : 439 - 450
  • [40] A political economy of positions in climate change negotiations: Economic, structural, domestic, and strategic explanations
    Bailer, Stefanie
    Weiler, Florian
    REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS, 2015, 10 (01) : 43 - 66