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Climate Change Regionalism in North America
Author(s) -
Selin Henrik,
VanDeveer Stacy D.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
review of policy research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.832
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1541-1338
pISSN - 1541-132X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1541-1338.2011.00496.x
Subject(s) - politics , multi level governance , climate change , corporate governance , political science , environmental governance , regionalism (politics) , sovereignty , negotiation , democracy , political economy of climate change , european union , political economy , economics , international trade , ecology , finance , biology , law
lobal institutions and debates about climate change governance attract consid-erable academic and media attention. The main multilateral forums are arenas forhigh-prole political negotiations, inter-state conicts, and thousands of nongov-ernmental actors. Similarly, national climate change politics and policy are signi-cant to decision makers and scholars, and local and urban climate change activismand planning also draw notable interest. However, outside the European Union(EU), much less analytical and political attention is paid to issues and possibilities ofregional-level climate change governance—despite the fact that regional coopera-tion and institutional arrangements offer a multitude of political, economic, andenvironmental benets not readily available in local, national, or global settings(Balsiger & VanDeveer, 2010; Jordan, Huitema, Van Asselt, Rayner, & Berkhout,2010; Patt, 2009). Furthermore, regional policy making around economic integra-tion and trade has proliferated in recent decades, resulting in scholarly and politicaldebates about the complementarities and conicts between global and regionaltrade initiatives, state sovereignty, and democratic governance (Kuhnhardt, 2010;Laursen, 2003).Even as North American trade and economic integration deepened signicantlyover the last 20 years, little public debate about regional options for better climatechange and energy governance has followed. In fact, few leading North Americannationalpoliticians—someinCanadaandMexicobutpracticallynoneintheUnitedStates—have paid serious attention to continental alternatives for reducing green-house gas (GHG) emissions and addressing adaptation needs, even as the dynamicnature of multilevel climate change governance driven by subnational policy lead-ership across the continent is growing (Selin & VanDeveer, 2009a, 2009b) However,it is possible to identify potential benets for North American countries of morecoordinated action across Canadian, U.S., and Mexican public and private sectorentities. Furthermore, global GHG emissions cannot be adequately reduced—andthe goal of keeping average global temperatures from increasing more than 2°Cover preindustrial levels cannot be met—without signicant cuts in North Americanemissions.This viewpoint article intends to stimulate both scholars and practitioners toengage in more serious reection and critical debate about opportunities forfurther coordinated North American responses to climate change. It draws atten-