Description
Knowledge Systems and Change in Climate Governance
Comparing India and South Africa
Routledge Advances in Climate Change Research Series
Author: Never Babette
Language: EnglishSubjects for Knowledge Systems and Change in Climate Governance:
Keywords
South Africa; Climate Change; India; Environmental economics; Environmental policy; Environmental studies; Sustainability; Sustainable development; greenhouse gas emissions; solar energy; climate change mitigation; national climate policy; climate governance; Pragmatic knowledge; comparative politics; environmental governance; Knowledge Systems; climate change adaptation; wind energy; Climate Knowledge System; Cognitive Evolution; Central Electricity Regulatory Commission; Tamil Nadu; Energy Efficiency; Background Knowledge; Domestic Climate Governance; Clean Energy Investments; Advocacy Coalition Framework; Energy Policy; Johannesburg Stock Exchange; Interview Partners; Civil Society; CDM Project; Triple Loop Learning; Climate Change Team; Opportunity Perception; Western Cape; Multi-level Influences; Public Private Partnerships; Dominant Climate Change Discourse; Carbon Disclosure Project
Approximative price 223.58 €
In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).
Add to cart the print on demand of Never BabettePublication date: 07-2014
Support: Print on demand
Approximative price 85.02 €
In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).
Add to cart the book of Never BabettePublication date: 11-2016
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback
Description
/li>Contents
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The success of international efforts to manage climate change depends on the participation of emerging economies. This book uses a comparative study of two of the most important, India and South Africa, to reveal new insights into managing climate change on a global scale.
The book provides a unique in-depth analysis of how these two countries are dealing with climate change at both national and province levels, from India?s advances in solar and wind energy development to South Africa?s efforts to introduce a carbon tax. Using the innovative theoretical framework of climate knowledge systems, it explores how people in India and South Africa engage with one other, learn and act by forming communities of practice. The book identifies the drivers and barriers of climate governance, showing how different forms of scientific, technological, normative and pragmatic knowledge can aid climate governance and analysing how the underlying mind-set that guides climate action in these countries is changing.
This book is a valuable resource for students and scholars of environmental policy, politics and governance, as well as comparative politics, climate change and sustainable development.
1. Introduction: Climate Governance in India and South Africa. 2. Why Connecting Learning, Networks and Change Makes Sense. 3. Theorizing Knowledge, Practice and Change in Climate Governance. Chapter 4. A Mixed Methods Approach. 5. Change in Figures: Regulatory Density, Clean Energy Investment and Carbon Disclosure 6. What the Experts Say: Survey Results 7. Features of a Knowledge System in India 8. Features of a Knowledge System in South Africa 9. Meta-Inference: Explanatory Power of the Concept Climate Knowledge System 10. Outlook
Babette Never is a researcher at the German Development Institute