Modernising Climate Policy in Australia: Climate Narratives and the Undoing of a Prime Minister
Author(s) -
Giorel Curran
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
environment and planning c government and policy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1472-3425
pISSN - 0263-774X
DOI - 10.1068/c10217
Subject(s) - undoing , narrative , modernization theory , mainstream , politics , political economy , government (linguistics) , climate justice , sociology , public administration , climate change , political science , law , ecology , psychology , linguistics , philosophy , psychotherapist , biology
Australia came very close to legislating an emissions trading scheme as part of a climate policy package in 2009. This climate policy was driven by a new Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, who had made addressing climate change his signature policy commitment both before and after the 2007 election that brought the Australian Labor Party to power. His climate policy was underpinned by two main interrelated narratives: ecological modernisation and climate justice. In this paper I consider the story of the Rudd government's climate policy experience through an ecological modernisation lens. In the end, it was the seeming disjuncture between political rhetoric and policy outcomes that brought the Rudd prime ministership down. The telling of the Rudd climate story through these narratives reveals some of the limitations of (mainstream) ecological modernisation as a major environmental management approach, as well as highlighting the vagaries of political leadership.Griffith Business School, School of Government and International RelationsFull Tex
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