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The EU and Climate Change Policy: Law, Politics and Prominence at Different Levels
Author(s) -
Chad Damro,
Iain Hardie,
Donald MacKenzie
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of contemporary european research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.299
H-Index - 15
ISSN - 1815-347X
DOI - 10.30950/jcer.v4i3.110
Subject(s) - politics , climate change , european union , political science , political economy , emissions trading , climate policy , institutional change , international trade , economic system , international economics , economics , law , public administration , ecology , biology
The European Union (EU) is a prominent player in the politics of climate change, operating as an authoritative regional actor that influences policy-making at the national and international levels. The EU’s climate change policies are thus subjected to multiple pressures that arise from the domestic politics of its twenty-seven individual member states and the international politics of non-EU states with which it negotiates. Facing these multiple pressures, how and why could such a non-traditional actor develop into a prominent player at different levels of climate change policy-making? This article argues that the EU’s rise to prominence can be understood by tracking a number of historical-legal institutional developments at the domestic and international levels. The article also provides a preliminary investigation of the EU emissions trading scheme, a new institutional mechanism that illustrates the policy pressures arising from different levels.

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