Dear GEP-Ed folks,
Sharing a new paper that might be of interest to you. We grapple with the ways in which Trump's approach to foreign policy contradicted some of the core principles of global environmental governance. We also discuss implications for global climate governance moving forward, including the global rise of right-wing populism and nationalism.
Best wishes,
Andrea
AbstractThis
paper explains the ideational foundations of Donald Trump’s rejection
of global climate cooperation and its implications for the future of
global climate governance. We argue that Trumpism’s antipathy is a
fundamental normative challenge to the key ideas that underpin global
climate cooperation. Here we explore two specific norm contestations:
(1) Collective action versus extralegal sovereignty, and (2) Common but
Differentiated Responsibility versus fairness-as-reciprocity. Trump’s
aggressive norm rejections are quite novel. His rejection of climate
politics in particular and his desire to return to a status quo ante in world politics, positions him as a distinct type of actor in the spectrum of norm contestation – a reactionary norm entrepreneur.
We contribute an ideational explanation of Trumpism’s rejection of
global climate cooperation by identifying the fundamental clash of ideas
and his role as a reactionary norm entrepreneur within the broader
framework of global climate governance. It offers a case study in a
high-profile instance of norm contestation and its implications for the
survival of the global climate change regime.
Associate Professor
School of Environment, Resources and Sustainability
& Balsillie School of International Affairs
University of Waterloo
Pronouns: she/her