Dear kind GEP-Ed folks,

I'm working with Tory Hoffmeister, an excellent student in my lab group who
is emerging as an expert on Loss and Damage, having worked with Saleem Huq
of ICCCAD, with the LDC Group, and attended three COPs and two Bonn SB
negotiations (as an undergrad--someone recruit her for a PhD ;-)). Tory is
now writing a thesis attempting to characterize the distance between
developed and developing countries on the liability and compensation
aspects of the Loss and Damage parts of the texts agreed in Warsaw, Lima,
Paris and Marrakesh.

The paradox Tory seeks to explain is that many in developing countries
consider the Paris language as a positive step in spite of the specific
exclusion of liability and compensation (and indications this was a red
line by the US and others). [Of course prospects may be much dimmer with
the election, unless maybe the US withdraws from the UNFCCC.] She wants to
characterize the distance between the positions of the North and South--are
they getting closer? Is the current area of action with Northern
governments providing voluntary contributions to subsidize insurance
schemes any kind of victory? Is there likely to be convergence around a
more substantive focal point?

While she'd welcome your candid thoughts on these substantive questions
(she's cc:ed), she's especially looking for a conceptual framework for the
study. I of course directed her to some neo-Gramscian approaches, such as
those of Okereke, Newell, and our own Ciplet/Roberts/Khan book *Power in a
Warming World*. I figured she could contrast that approach with perhaps
more Realist or Institutionalist approaches in explaining the outcomes on
L&D to the present (or even constructivist ones.). But I thought I'd ask
you all directly for ideas--are there excellent pieces in those two
traditions or others you'd suggest?

If you'd like to respond to her offline, she could report back to the group
after she gets several sources, if there is interest. Thanks sincerely for
any help.

Best to all for 2017.  Fell deeds awake,

Timmons
On Twitter @timmonsroberts
The Climate and Development Lab www.climatedevlab.brown.edu
Collaboration|Impact|Mentorship|Sustainability|Justice

J. Timmons Roberts
Ittleson Professor of Environmental Studies and Sociology
Brown University https://vivo.brown.edu/display/jr17
Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution, 2012-14
http://www.brookings.edu/experts/robertst

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