The politics of domestic climate governance: making sense of complex participation patterns

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Abstract

This article reviews literature on six actor groups engaged in domestic mitigation governance. It evaluates the usefulness of three climate governance models: market failure, socio-technological transition and public support. For each group, three modes of action are considered: influencing, decision-making and implementing. The public support model is found to best capture the wide range of actors and real-world, complex participation patterns of domestic climate governance. The socio-technological transitions and market failure models in their narrow focus on political and business actors ignore the influencing roles of other groups, such as climate advocacy organizations, anti-climate action groups, Indigenous people’s organizations and labor unions. However, they offer more insight on actor engagement in decision-making and implementation, roles mostly ignored by the public support model. Overall, more systematic comparative research is needed on a wider range of actors, on domestic climate governance in the global South, on differences across countries, sectors and policy domains and on interactions between actors.

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APA

Boasson, E. L., Burns, C., & Pulver, S. (2023). The politics of domestic climate governance: making sense of complex participation patterns. Journal of European Public Policy, 30(3), 513–536. https://doi.org/10.1080/13501763.2022.2096102

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