The European Union at Copenhagen : actorness, leadership and the international climate change regime

The European Union has gained a reputation in recent years as a ʻgreenʼ leader, especially within the UNFCCC. That reputation perhaps amplified the perceived failure that occurred at the 15th Conference of Parties in December 2009 in Copenhagen. Why was Copenhagen such a disappointment? The post-mod...

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Main Author: Mcilwain, John Robertson
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33948
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-339482018-01-05T17:24:58Z The European Union at Copenhagen : actorness, leadership and the international climate change regime Mcilwain, John Robertson The European Union has gained a reputation in recent years as a ʻgreenʼ leader, especially within the UNFCCC. That reputation perhaps amplified the perceived failure that occurred at the 15th Conference of Parties in December 2009 in Copenhagen. Why was Copenhagen such a disappointment? The post-modern character of the European Union—as a polity somewhere between a federal state and a international organization —has often made it difficult for the organization to take on a leadership role, nay operate, within the traditional international relations structure. The reasons for the EUʼs recent difficulty within the climate change regime may reside with two factors. First, an undeveloped sense of ʻactornessʼ on the part of the EU and, second, systemic problems within the regime itself. Here we analyze what happened at the Conference by looking at the development of the EUʼs role and polices within the climate change regime Arts, Faculty of Central Eastern Northern European Studies, Department of Graduate 2011-04-26T14:00:14Z 2011-04-26T14:00:14Z 2011 2011-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33948 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description The European Union has gained a reputation in recent years as a ʻgreenʼ leader, especially within the UNFCCC. That reputation perhaps amplified the perceived failure that occurred at the 15th Conference of Parties in December 2009 in Copenhagen. Why was Copenhagen such a disappointment? The post-modern character of the European Union—as a polity somewhere between a federal state and a international organization —has often made it difficult for the organization to take on a leadership role, nay operate, within the traditional international relations structure. The reasons for the EUʼs recent difficulty within the climate change regime may reside with two factors. First, an undeveloped sense of ʻactornessʼ on the part of the EU and, second, systemic problems within the regime itself. Here we analyze what happened at the Conference by looking at the development of the EUʼs role and polices within the climate change regime === Arts, Faculty of === Central Eastern Northern European Studies, Department of === Graduate
author Mcilwain, John Robertson
spellingShingle Mcilwain, John Robertson
The European Union at Copenhagen : actorness, leadership and the international climate change regime
author_facet Mcilwain, John Robertson
author_sort Mcilwain, John Robertson
title The European Union at Copenhagen : actorness, leadership and the international climate change regime
title_short The European Union at Copenhagen : actorness, leadership and the international climate change regime
title_full The European Union at Copenhagen : actorness, leadership and the international climate change regime
title_fullStr The European Union at Copenhagen : actorness, leadership and the international climate change regime
title_full_unstemmed The European Union at Copenhagen : actorness, leadership and the international climate change regime
title_sort european union at copenhagen : actorness, leadership and the international climate change regime
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33948
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