2012
DOI: 10.1007/s13280-011-0242-5
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Climate Policy in India: What Shapes International, National and State Policy?

Abstract: At the international level, India is emerging as a key actor in climate negotiations, while at the national and sub-national levels, the climate policy landscape is becoming more active and more ambitious. It is essential to unravel this complex landscape if we are to understand why policy looks the way it does, and the extent to which India might contribute to a future international framework for tackling climate change as well as how international parties might cooperate with and support India's domestic eff… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(67 citation statements)
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References 12 publications
(13 reference statements)
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“…The comparative politics literature, for example, explores why national governments have implemented a variety of national policies aimed at climate protection (Harrison & Sundstrom, 2007;Held, Roger, & Nag, 2013;Bailey & Compston, 2012;Compston & Bailey, 2008;Harrison & Sundstrom, 2010) and the shared objectives and concepts that define them (Hollo, Kulovesi, & Mehling, 2013). Country studies examine specific instances of experimentation with national climate policy,for example, Sugiyama and Takeuchi(2008) for Japan, Tsang and Kolk (2010) for China, Atteridge, Shrivastava, Pahuja & Upadhyay (2012) for India, La Rovere (2011) for Brazil, Rabe(2011) for the US, Wurzel and Connelly (2010) for the EU and Weidner and Mez (2008) for Germany. Other bodies of literature seek to compare these efforts across countries in order to draw a composite global picture of emergent climate policy at the national level.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The comparative politics literature, for example, explores why national governments have implemented a variety of national policies aimed at climate protection (Harrison & Sundstrom, 2007;Held, Roger, & Nag, 2013;Bailey & Compston, 2012;Compston & Bailey, 2008;Harrison & Sundstrom, 2010) and the shared objectives and concepts that define them (Hollo, Kulovesi, & Mehling, 2013). Country studies examine specific instances of experimentation with national climate policy,for example, Sugiyama and Takeuchi(2008) for Japan, Tsang and Kolk (2010) for China, Atteridge, Shrivastava, Pahuja & Upadhyay (2012) for India, La Rovere (2011) for Brazil, Rabe(2011) for the US, Wurzel and Connelly (2010) for the EU and Weidner and Mez (2008) for Germany. Other bodies of literature seek to compare these efforts across countries in order to draw a composite global picture of emergent climate policy at the national level.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These factors range from socio economic development, economic growth, energy security, and more recently climate variability. Literature also captures the changing discourse on climate change by government, civil society and the media (Jogesh 2011;Michaelowa & Michaelowa 2012;Atteridge et al 2012;Dubash 2013;Thaker & Leiserowitz 2014).…”
Section: Indiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, in the period in which this study is situated, a 'equitable access to sustainable development', which can be seen as an attempt to mediate between the long-institutionalized concerns for equity and material development and an apparent desire to be seen to play a more constructive role in international negotiations (Atteridge et al, 2012;Dubash, 2009;Stevenson, 2011).…”
Section: Governmental Knowledges and National Spacementioning
confidence: 99%