Alternative Frameworks for International Climate Cooperation: Towards a Systematic Assessment Matrix

Recent climate negotiations have evinced a controversial debate on how best to reform the institutional and legal framework of international climate governance. Unlike the domestic policy context, where widely recognised criteria have evolved to guide choices among alternative policy frameworks, no...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Bibliographische Detailangaben
Link(s) zu Dokument(en):WIFO Publikation
Veröffentlicht in:WIFO Studies
1. Verfasser: Michael Mehling
Format: book
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: 2012
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Recent climate negotiations have evinced a controversial debate on how best to reform the institutional and legal framework of international climate governance. Unlike the domestic policy context, where widely recognised criteria have evolved to guide choices among alternative policy frameworks, no equally systematic approach has yet been developed for the international arena, where narrow state preferences or a specific methodology tend to dominate the discussion. Drawing on lessons from the evaluation of domestic climate policies and measures as well as the study of broader international environmental governance, this paper surveys existing research and proceeds to define a matrix of criteria for the classification of alternative frameworks for international climate cooperation. In so doing, it hopes to facilitate a more transparent and systematic approach to the assessment of alternative frameworks for climate cooperation. Specifically, the criteria proposed in this paper are: level of ambition, compliance facilitation and control, institutional capacity, participation and inclusiveness, systemic coherence, as well as political and economic feasibility. Future application of this matrix to existing and proposed climate governance frameworks will determine whether the foregoing criteria offer a suitable frame of reference for the evaluation and comparison of contending climate architectures, regimes, and institutions. Given the proliferation of existing and proposed venues to advance climate governance, such a framework would seem both timely and useful.