Call number:
PIK N 071-14-0074
Description / Table of Contents:
Contents: PART I: CONFLICT: BARRIERS TO A NEW AGREEMENT ; 1. Observations from the climate negotiations in Durban, South Africa ; 2. Does fairness matter in international environmental governance ; 3. Formation of climate agreements: The role of uncertainty and learning ; 4. Burden sharing in global climate governance ; 5. Negotiating to avoid 'gradual' versus 'dangerous' climate change: An experimental test of two prisoners' dilemmas ; 6. U.S. climate policy and the shale gas revolution ; PART 2:RESOLUTION: PATHS TOWARD A NEW AGREEMENT ; 7. The role of inequality in international environmental agreements with endogenous minimum participation requirements ; 8. Climate policy coordination through institutional design: an experimental examination ; 9. Improving the design of international environmental agreements ; 10. Managing dangerous anthropogenic interference: decision rules for climate governance ; 11. Exclusive approaches to climate governance: More effective than the UNFCCC? ; 12. Bottom up or top down ; PART 3:GOVERNANCE: STRUCTURES FOR A NEW AGREEMENT ; 13. Rethinking the legal form and principles of a new climate agreement ; 14. Technology agreements with heterogenous countries ; 15. International guidance for border carbon adjustments to address carbon leakage ; 16. The effect of enforcement in the presence of strong reciprocity: an application of agent-based modeling ; 17. EU emissions trading: achievements, challenges, solutions ; 18. The EU's quest for linked carbon markets: turbulence and headwind
Type of Medium:
Monograph available for loan
Pages:
XXIX, 297 S. : graph. Darst.
ISBN:
9780415643795
Series Statement:
Routledge advances in climate change research
Location:
A 18 - must be ordered
Branch Library:
PIK Library
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