Progress in global climate change politics? Reasserting national state territoriality in a ‘post-political’ world

This paper builds on previous geographical and social science work at the boundaries of climate change by (re)asserting the significance of the territoriality of the national state in global climate negotiations. Using the post-political consensus as a theoretical framework and drawing upon examples...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progress in human geography 2012-08, Vol.36 (4), p.457-474
1. Verfasser: Kythreotis, Andrew Paul
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description This paper builds on previous geographical and social science work at the boundaries of climate change by (re)asserting the significance of the territoriality of the national state in global climate negotiations. Using the post-political consensus as a theoretical framework and drawing upon examples from climate change negotiations like Kyoto and Copenhagen, it argues that it is too premature to fetishize the consensus of, and collectivism between, national states in global climate politics. As geographers, ‘territoriality’, both as a material and discursive device, is fundamental in, and constitutive of, how we interpret and understand climate change and the politics thereof.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; SAGE Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Bargaining
Bgi / Prodig
Borders
Boundaries
Climate Change
Collectivism
Copenhagen, Denmark
Environmental impact
Environmental policy
Environmental Protection
Geodemographics
Global climate
Globalization
Human geography
Nation state
Negotiation
Political and economic geography
Politics
Pragmatism
Social Sciences
Society
Territoriality
title Progress in global climate change politics? Reasserting national state territoriality in a ‘post-political’ world
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