Call for papers

ECPR General Conference

University of Innsbruck, 26 - 28 August 2020

The politics of low carbon transformations: Exploring state and non-state 
relations in the post-Paris climate policy landscape

Chair: Naghmeh Nasiritousi (Stockholm University) 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Co-chair: Jens Marquardt (Stockholm University) 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Paris 
Agreement recognize the importance of non- and sub-state climate action to 
achieve a transformation towards a low carbon society. A wide range of actors 
such as businesses, civil society, trade unions, youth, indigenous people, 
regions, cities, and municipalities have been invited and are taking voluntary 
action to address climate change. The climate regime thus combines top-down 
elements of international cooperation with bottom-up elements of voluntary 
climate action. While such a hybrid governance arrangement aims to mobilize 
climate action on all levels of society, the approach also runs the risk of 
marginalizing more critical voices, leaving out issues of contestation, or 
silencing competing interpretations of a low carbon society.
This panel seeks to advance the research frontier in climate governance and 
explore the opportunities for critical social science interventions which 
examine the interplay between domestic and transnational climate initiatives in 
the political quest for de-carbonization. The panel invites contributions 
conceptualizing the relationship between state and non-state climate action 
involving public and private actors; assessing the effectiveness and legitimacy 
of non-state climate action, and critically appraising the political impacts 
and transformative potential of transnational climate action.
The panel encourages methodological innovation and pluralism by including 
quantitative and qualitative methods such as discourse analysis, network 
analysis, single and comparative case studies. The panel will thus advance our 
understandings of the competing rationales, goals, and aims of the state and 
non-state actors in climate governance to achieve a low carbon society as well 
as how non-state actors can contribute to mobilizing climate action in 
conjunction with or in opposition to the state in different political contexts.

Section: Environmental Politics

Paper submission:

Please email the panel chairs by 1 February 2020:
*     Paper title
*     Abstract (max 500 words)
*     Author(s) name(s) and institution(s)


Best regards,

Naghmeh and Jens


Naghmeh Nasiritousi (PhD)
Researcher
Department of Political Science
Stockholm University
SE-106 91 Stockholm
Sweden
Email: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Tel: +468163466

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