ABSTRACT

Global climate change is perceived to be one of the biggest challenges for international politics in the 21st century. This work seeks to fuse a global governance perspective together with different interpretive approaches, offering a novel way of looking at international climate politics. Equipped with a common interpretive tool-kit, the authors examine different issue-areas and excavate the contours of an overall pattern – the depoliticisation of climate governance. It is this concept which represents the overarching theme connecting the different contributions, addressing issues such as how the securitization of climate change conceals its socio-economic roots; how highly political decisions and value-judgements are couched in the terms of science; how the reframing of climate change as a matter of economic calculation and investment narrows the scope of political action; and how the prevailing concentration on technological solutions to climate change turns it into a mere administrative issue to be tackled by experts. Highlighting the depoliticisation of highly political issues provides a means to bring the political back into one of the most important issue areas of 21st century world politics.

The editors have assembled a series of 14 interpretive inquiries into discourses of global climate governance which aim to flesh out an interpretive methodology, demonstrating the value it offers to those seeking to achieve a better understanding of global climate governance.


This work will be of great interest to students and scholars of environmental politics, political theory and climate change.

chapter 1|22 pages

Introduction

How and why to deconstruct the greenhouse

chapter 2|17 pages

Discursive interplay and co-constitution

Carbonification of environmental discourses

part I|47 pages

The economization of climate change

chapter 3|14 pages

Climate politics as investment

Understanding discourse through governmental practice

chapter 4|15 pages

How to trade ‘not cutting down trees’

A governmentality perspective on the commodification of avoided deforestation 1

part II|48 pages

The securitization of climate change

chapter 6|14 pages

Climate chains

Neo-Malthusianism, militarism and migration

chapter 7|17 pages

Apocalypse now!

From exceptional rhetoric to risk management in global climate politics

chapter 8|15 pages

(In)convenient convergences

‘Climate refugees', apocalyptic discourses and the depoliticization of climate-induced migration

part III|44 pages

The technocratization of climate change

chapter 9|13 pages

My space

Governing individuals' carbon emissions 1

chapter 11|15 pages

Climate engineering

Spectacle, tragedy or solution? A content analysis of news media framing

part IV|76 pages

Between de- and re-politicization

chapter 12|15 pages

White ponchos dripping away?

Glacier narratives in Bolivian climate change discourse

chapter 13|19 pages

‘Climate justice', ‘green economy' or ‘a one planet lifestyle’

Hegemonic narratives in transnational NGOs and social movements

chapter 14|15 pages

Building legitimacy

Consensus and conflict over historic responsibility for climate change

chapter 16|9 pages

Reflections