2013
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-6661-7_11
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After Copenhagen, Revisiting Both the Scientific and Political Framings of the Climate Change Regime

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Cited by 2 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…36 Related to this, political scientists have long looked at how science's view of nature shapes governance regimes, with Dahan and Aykut, for instance, describing the 'scientifico-political' negotiation of the 2 C climate mitigation target in Copenhagen in 2009 and how these negotiations stabilized around that number. 37 Anthropologists have also explored the relationship between nature and culture, with ethnoclimatologists asking to what degree our representations of climate are produced by our direct experience with weather, or by our social organizations and institutions, or co-produced by both. 38 Finally, geographers look at how a sense of place is continuously coconstructed by changes in natural and cultural elements of the landscape, with a changing climate playing an important role.…”
Section: The Constitutive Lensmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…36 Related to this, political scientists have long looked at how science's view of nature shapes governance regimes, with Dahan and Aykut, for instance, describing the 'scientifico-political' negotiation of the 2 C climate mitigation target in Copenhagen in 2009 and how these negotiations stabilized around that number. 37 Anthropologists have also explored the relationship between nature and culture, with ethnoclimatologists asking to what degree our representations of climate are produced by our direct experience with weather, or by our social organizations and institutions, or co-produced by both. 38 Finally, geographers look at how a sense of place is continuously coconstructed by changes in natural and cultural elements of the landscape, with a changing climate playing an important role.…”
Section: The Constitutive Lensmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…14,25,34 Unsurprisingly, many studies using the interactional lens focus on the IPCC and UNFCCC conferences as sites and results of co-production. 24,34,37 They also analyze the interaction between universalized climate knowledge and local contexts of meaning making. Based on the same IPCC knowledge, national governments have pursued different climate policies in line with their own traditions, beliefs, and value systems.…”
Section: The Interactional Lensmentioning
confidence: 99%
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