Dear all,

The deadline for this workshop has been extended until 5 December 2014. Please 
circulate to people who might be interested.

Kind regards,


Jakob Skovgaard


Den 26/10/2014 kl. 16.20 skrev Jakob Skovgaard 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>:

Dear colleagues & friends,

Apologies for cross-posting. Please find attached the Call for Papers for the 
work shop “Climate Finance: Taking Stock, Future Directions for Policy and 
Research”, in Lund, Sweden, 17-18 April 2015. Deadline for abstract 
submissions: 1 December 2014.

Please distribute.

Kind regards,

Jakob Skovgaard




****************CALL FOR 
PAPERS**************************************************************************************




2015 Lund Climate Finance Workshop:

“Climate Finance: Taking Stock, Future Directions for Policy and Research”

 Venue: Lund University, Sweden

17-18 April


Climate finance (understood here as financial flows mobilised by developed 
countries to support climate change mitigation and adaptation measures in 
developing countries) is increasing in importance both within multilateral 
climate negotiations and in terms of the volume of financial flows to 
developing countries. In both respects, climate finance is entering a crucial 
phase. The period after Cancún has been characterised both by 
instiutionalisation — notably through the operationalisation of the UN Green 
Climate Fund — but also by a lack of internationally agreed medium-term targets 
for climate finance. As negotiations under the United Nations Framework 
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) move closer to a longer-term climate 
agreement for adoption in Paris in late 2015, parties are discussing different 
issues: How to scale up funding towards the collective target of mobilising 
$100 billion a year in climate finance by 2020; how to develop accounting rules 
to track progress towards this target; how to govern the institutional 
architecture for climate finance; and how funding commitments for developing 
countries will inform a post-2020 climate agreement.

 Regarding the provision of climate finance, the initial fast-start finance 
phase (2010-12) has been followed by a period of consolidating and building 
upon the experiences from this phase.

At the same time, the academic study of climate finance from a political 
science or international relations perspective has been growing slowly but 
significantly. While numerous scholars have focused on how to develop sources 
and delivery mechanisms for climate finance that are effective, efficient and 
that leverage private investment, and how to account for climate finance flows, 
fewer scholars have focused on the political and social causes, consequences 
and normative implications of the emerging system of climate finance.



Altogether, there is a need for stocktaking and for assessment of where both 
climate finance and the study of climate finance are going, and where they 
should go. The workshop attempts to address these gaps by bringing together 
social science scholars working on climate finance. Below we have listed 
questions with which the workshop intends to engage. Empirical, theoretical and 
normative contributions addressing these issues are particularly welcome.



•    Why does the UNFCCC’s regime output concerning climate finance look the 
way it does? Which factors and actors have been most influential in shaping it?

•   How do negotiations on climate finance influence the broader dynamics of 
multilateral climate negotiations and vice versa? What role could and should 
climate finance play under a post-2020 agreement?

•   How can we explain the behaviour of various actors (key states, the UNFCCC 
secretariat, other international organisations, civil society, private sector) 
in the governance of climate finance?

•       To what degree and how has the output of the climate finance 
negotiations influenced the delivery of climate finance e.g. allocation 
priorities, financing modalities and the mix of multilateral and bilateral 
funding channels?

•   Why do industrialised countries differ on the levels and types climate 
finance they deliver? Why do developing countries differ on the levels and 
types of climate finance they receive?

•   Five years on from the report of the UN High-Level Advisory Group on 
Climate Change Financing (AGF), does its assessment still hold that meeting the 
$100 billion target will be ‘challenging but feasible’? What factors have 
enabled or constrained the establishment of innovative sources of climate 
finance?

•   How can we assess the institutional architecture for climate finance as 
well as the delivery of climate finance in terms of different conceptions of 
justice and legitimacy? Have differences between developed and developing 
countries on these issues narrowed or widened?

•   How can we understand the relationship between climate finance and 
traditional development finance? What implications does the conceptualisation 
of climate finance as distinct from development finance have?

•   How can the case study of climate finance yield insights for broader 
theoretical and policy issues, including funding global public goods, 
international norms and shifting power dynamics in global economic and 
political relations?



The primary output of this workshop will be a special issue in a leading 
international journal. Contacts with journal editors are already under way.

Paper proposals must include:

•      Name of the paper-giver(s), current position and affiliation.


•      Short CV.

•      Paper abstract of no more than 300 words.

      The deadline for the submission of paper proposals is Monday 1 December 
2014. Paper proposals should be sent to 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> under the subject 
heading: “Lund Climate Finance Workshop – April 2015”.

Selected participants will be notified on or shortly after 16 December. For 
informal queries, please email 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.



Workshop format and follow-up

The number of participants is limited to 15-20 (presenters and discussants). 
Full papers (of up to 8000 words) should be submitted one month before the 
event. Participants may be asked to act as discussants or chairs. After the 
workshop, the organizers will provide constructive feedback follow-up; strict 
deadlines for the final version of the papers will be set.

Travel and Accommodation

Funding is available to cover travel and accommodation a limited number of 
participants. Applicants should clearly state that they would like to opt in 
for funding when they submit their paper proposal.


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