Dear GEP Colleagues,
I am looking for some examples of people being allowed into the climate negotiations in meaningful ways -- that is, in ways that allow persons genuinely to highlight their concerns, interests and rights so as to influence, at least a tiny bit, climate
diplomacy.
I'm thinking of occasions when individuals might have been allowed into negotiations, thereby getting the interests of people discussed alongside those of nation-states (and industries, etc.).
An example, maybe an extreme one, might be Greta Thunberg on stage at COP25. Maybe she was ignored, but it was clear that her message was at least heard by some diplomats (of course not the ones that didn't bother to listen to her speak).
If you know of examples, and related literature describing them, I would welcome hearing from you. Please reply to me directly and I will gladly compile the responses and send them to the list as a single message.
Many thanks indeed. Stay healthy.
All the best,
Paul
PAUL
G. HARRIS
Chair Professor of Global and Environmental Studies,
EdUHK
BOOKS:
+A
Research Agenda for Climate Justice (E. Elgar),
here.
+Climate
Change and Ocean Governance (Cambridge University Press),
here.
+Global
Ethics and Climate Change, 2nd. ed. (Edinburgh University Press),
here.
+Routledge
Handbook of Global Environmental Politics (Routledge),
here.
+20
more books on global environmental politics, policy and ethics
here.
+100+
articles
and book chapters
here.
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