Dear all,

I would like to share my and Jacob Fortier’s latest publication in Global 
Policy on the diverse cities of global urban climate governance.

In this article, we seek to identify and analyse the characteristics and 
position of cities in global urban climate governance to reassess its 
composition. To do so, we conduct a social network analysis of 15 transnational 
city networks. Results emphasise that global and large cities are the most 
central, but small and middle-size cities are the most numerous actors of the 
system. Global South cities are larger than their Northern counterparts in the 
system. Those less central and understudied actors likely have less influence 
over which norms are shared, yet they should not be seen as followers or 
imitators of climate policy.

See a Twitter thread here: 
https://x.com/Marielle_Papin/status/1787442418473669073.

I think/hope it will be of interest to several of you.

Best wishes,

Marielle



Marielle Papin, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Political Science
Canada Research Chair in Urban Wellness
Director, Research Institute for Urban Wellness
Faculty of Arts and Science, MacEwan University

ᐊᒥᐢᑿᒌᐚᐢᑲᐦᐃᑲᐣ (Amiskwacîwâskahikan), Treaty 6/Métis Territory
We acknowledge that the land on which we gather in Treaty Six Territory is the 
traditional gathering place for many Indigenous people. We honour and respect 
the history, languages, ceremonies, and culture of the First Nations, Métis, 
and Inuit who call this territory home.

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