International economic institutions economise climate change, treating it as an economic rather than environmental issue. This book explores how three such institutions - G20, IMF, OECD - have addressed climate finance and fossil fuel subsidies, what factors have shaped their approaches, and the consequences of the economisation of climate change.
International economic institutions economise climate change, treating it as an economic rather than environmental issue. This book explores how three such institutions - G20, IMF, OECD - have addressed climate finance and fossil fuel subsidies, what factors have shaped their approaches, and the consequences of the economisation of climate change.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Jakob Skovgaard is an Associate Professor in Political Science at Lund University. His research focuses on the interaction between economic and environmental institutions and objectives in climate policy. From 2007 to 2010 he worked in the international climate change team of the Danish Finance Ministry. He is the co-editor of the books The Politics of Fossil Fuel Subsidies and their Reform (Cambridge, 2018) and Governing the Climate-Energy Nexus: Institutional Complexity and Its Challenges to Effectiveness and Legitimacy (Cambridge, 2020).
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Part I. Introduction: 1. Introduction: The economisation of climate change and why it matters in the case of international economic institutions Part II. Setting the Stage: 2. A framework for studying institutional output and its alignment, causes and consequences 3. The three institutions, their roles and the environment Part III. Fossil Fuel Subsidies: 4. Fossil fuel subsidies: Key issues 5. The G20 and fossil fuel subsidy reform: The catalyst 6. The OECD and fossil fuel subsidies: The knowledge provider 7. The IMF and fossil fuel subsidies: The unexpected environmentalist 8. The alignment of the economic institutions on fossil fuel subsidies: Synergies, but definitions can be divisive Part IV. Climate Finance: 9. Climate finance: Key issues 10. The G20 and climate finance: Introducing finance ministries to the topic 11. The OECD and climate finance: Development and investment 12. The IMF and climate finance: Carbon pricing rears its head 13. The alignment of the economic institutions on climate finance: Efficiency in development and investments, but also carbon pricing Part V. Conclusions: 14. Conclusions References Index.
Preface Part I. Introduction: 1. Introduction: The economisation of climate change and why it matters in the case of international economic institutions Part II. Setting the Stage: 2. A framework for studying institutional output and its alignment, causes and consequences 3. The three institutions, their roles and the environment Part III. Fossil Fuel Subsidies: 4. Fossil fuel subsidies: Key issues 5. The G20 and fossil fuel subsidy reform: The catalyst 6. The OECD and fossil fuel subsidies: The knowledge provider 7. The IMF and fossil fuel subsidies: The unexpected environmentalist 8. The alignment of the economic institutions on fossil fuel subsidies: Synergies, but definitions can be divisive Part IV. Climate Finance: 9. Climate finance: Key issues 10. The G20 and climate finance: Introducing finance ministries to the topic 11. The OECD and climate finance: Development and investment 12. The IMF and climate finance: Carbon pricing rears its head 13. The alignment of the economic institutions on climate finance: Efficiency in development and investments, but also carbon pricing Part V. Conclusions: 14. Conclusions References Index.
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