Idéer om klimaretfærdighed

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Idéer om klimaretfærdighed. / Hunt, Oliver Bugge; Christiansen , Christian O.

Klimaets Idéhistorie . ed. / Jakob Bek-Thomsen; Mikkel Thorup. Baggrund, 2021. p. 81-96.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hunt, OB & Christiansen , CO 2021, Idéer om klimaretfærdighed. in J Bek-Thomsen & M Thorup (eds), Klimaets Idéhistorie . Baggrund, pp. 81-96. <https://baggrund.com/vare/klimaets-idehistorie/>

APA

Hunt, O. B., & Christiansen , C. O. (2021). Idéer om klimaretfærdighed. In J. Bek-Thomsen, & M. Thorup (Eds.), Klimaets Idéhistorie (pp. 81-96). Baggrund. https://baggrund.com/vare/klimaets-idehistorie/

Vancouver

Hunt OB, Christiansen CO. Idéer om klimaretfærdighed. In Bek-Thomsen J, Thorup M, editors, Klimaets Idéhistorie . Baggrund. 2021. p. 81-96

Author

Hunt, Oliver Bugge ; Christiansen , Christian O. / Idéer om klimaretfærdighed. Klimaets Idéhistorie . editor / Jakob Bek-Thomsen ; Mikkel Thorup. Baggrund, 2021. pp. 81-96

Bibtex

@inbook{ab52e887e36a4a8ea95e00f857c0f549,
title = "Id{\'e}er om klimaretf{\ae}rdighed",
abstract = "The aim of this chapter is to explore when and how climate change became an issue of social justice in international climate negotiations. We argue that around the turn of the millennium, climate change went from primarily being framed as natural science and a technical issue that suggested market-based approaches as remedy for the crisis, to being framed as an issue where climate justice took centre stage. This shift consisted of new ways of talking and thinking about climate change, a discursive shift that placed emphasis on global justice and anti-capitalist criticism. The chapter mainly analyses the period from the implementation of the United Nations climate agreement (UNFCC) in 1992, to the climate negotiations in Copenhagen in 2009, where the struggle for climate justice was popularised on the international political scene. Empirically, our primary focus is on the UN{\textquoteright}s climate negotiations and what we, consistent with the research literature, refer to as the international climate justice movement.",
author = "Hunt, {Oliver Bugge} and Christiansen, {Christian O.}",
year = "2021",
language = "Dansk",
pages = "81--96",
editor = "Jakob Bek-Thomsen and Mikkel Thorup",
booktitle = "Klimaets Id{\'e}historie",
publisher = "Baggrund",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Idéer om klimaretfærdighed

AU - Hunt, Oliver Bugge

AU - Christiansen , Christian O.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - The aim of this chapter is to explore when and how climate change became an issue of social justice in international climate negotiations. We argue that around the turn of the millennium, climate change went from primarily being framed as natural science and a technical issue that suggested market-based approaches as remedy for the crisis, to being framed as an issue where climate justice took centre stage. This shift consisted of new ways of talking and thinking about climate change, a discursive shift that placed emphasis on global justice and anti-capitalist criticism. The chapter mainly analyses the period from the implementation of the United Nations climate agreement (UNFCC) in 1992, to the climate negotiations in Copenhagen in 2009, where the struggle for climate justice was popularised on the international political scene. Empirically, our primary focus is on the UN’s climate negotiations and what we, consistent with the research literature, refer to as the international climate justice movement.

AB - The aim of this chapter is to explore when and how climate change became an issue of social justice in international climate negotiations. We argue that around the turn of the millennium, climate change went from primarily being framed as natural science and a technical issue that suggested market-based approaches as remedy for the crisis, to being framed as an issue where climate justice took centre stage. This shift consisted of new ways of talking and thinking about climate change, a discursive shift that placed emphasis on global justice and anti-capitalist criticism. The chapter mainly analyses the period from the implementation of the United Nations climate agreement (UNFCC) in 1992, to the climate negotiations in Copenhagen in 2009, where the struggle for climate justice was popularised on the international political scene. Empirically, our primary focus is on the UN’s climate negotiations and what we, consistent with the research literature, refer to as the international climate justice movement.

M3 - Bidrag til bog/antologi

SP - 81

EP - 96

BT - Klimaets Idéhistorie

A2 - Bek-Thomsen, Jakob

A2 - Thorup, Mikkel

PB - Baggrund

ER -

ID: 316511949