Cantitate/Preț
Produs

The Cultures of Markets: The Political Economy of Climate Governance

Autor Janelle Knox-Hayes
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 mai 2016
Anthropogenic climate change poses a grave threat to societies around the world. The greenhouse gases that generate climate change are produced by virtually every sector of every economy. The predominant response of governments around the world is to mitigate climate change through the capping and trading of emissions. This book explores the establishment of emissions trading as a form of environmental, market-based governance in the United States, Europe, Australia, South Korea, Japan, and China. The book conceptualizes markets as institutions, and analyzes them as a system of climate governance. To this end, it argues that international efforts to promulgate markets run up against local cultures of markets that shape economic practices and knowledge to different degrees. While the global agenda under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change has sought to develop similar systems to enable interconnected and synchronized emissions reductions, each of the cases analyzed here has produced different results. The markets and climate policies established reflect the syncretic impact of socio-political and cultural context on the institutional transfer of markets. Each country expresses a varying degree of ease or unease with the establishment of markets as systems of climate governance. Exploration of market adaptation adds new insights to theories of varieties of capitalism. The book also examines the material implications of emissions markets on the environment and climatic systems. In sum, the study finds that cultures of markets present a substantial challenge to a universalist prescription for resolving climate change and highlights issues at the interface of political and economic governance in different political economies. This includes issues of citizen, state, and industry participation, and the materiality of economic and financial productivity.
Citește tot Restrânge

Preț: 59478 lei

Preț vechi: 85138 lei
-30% Nou

Puncte Express: 892

Preț estimativ în valută:
11386 11710$ 9446£

Carte tipărită la comandă

Livrare economică 07-13 februarie

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780198718451
ISBN-10: 0198718454
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 161 x 241 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.64 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

How can humanity best tackle climate change? Knox-Hayes's nuanced examination of how emissions markets developed in the US, Europe, East Asia and Australia is a vital contribution to a crucial debate.
Janelle Knox-Hayes has written the definitive treatment of governance, markets and climate change. In the light of the Paris Accord we need a path forward to realise the lofty ambitions of the signing governments. Knox-Hayes addresses this issue, amongst others challenging us to think about reconciling national interests with climate governance at the local and global levels. It is essential reading for academics, policy makers and those of us committed to making a difference to the future.
Climate change presents one of the most complex and consequential collective action problems in human history. Can it be solved through the creation of markets? In this carefully researched, lucidly argued book, Janelle Knox-Hayes explores the variegated institutional, financial and cultural logics of market-based approaches to climate governance, from Euro-America to the Asia-Pacific region. Building on the tools of economic geography, historical political economy and the new sociology of finance, Knox-Hayes offers an original, illuminating account of the construction and operation of emissions markets, their limits, their failures and their potentials. An essential contribution to our understanding of emergent attempts, at global, national and subnational spatial scales, to stimulate, intensify and coordinate institutional responses to climate change.
Janelle Knox-Hayes has to be congratulated for this impressive monograph. The book on climate governance uses a cultural-economic conceptualization to discuss the development of emissions markets in a comparative study, thus connecting economic geography with approaches in political economy, finance and sociology. The book puts climate governance on the agenda of the social sciences and it does this with an impressive literacy of the field. The comparative perspective in part II is particularly illustrative as it analyzes diverse experiences with climate governance in different political economies worldwide. This leads to a synthesis of the different structures in part III and a discussion of pathways toward a broader cultural-institutional understanding of the making and valuation of emissions markets.
Janelle Knox-Hayes addresses an important and often overlooked topic in the literature on climate change governance. Local customs and practices play a critical role in the development of new markets and related institutions. At a time when market-based solutions are at the forefront of policy options around the world, her book asks the right questions.

Notă biografică

Janelle Knox-Hayes is the Lister Brothers Associate Professor of Economic Geography and Planning in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She holds a visiting research fellowship at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment at Oxford University. Her research focuses on the ways in which social and environmental systems are governed under changing temporal and spatial scales as a consequence of globalization. Janelle has been the recipient of an SSRC Abe Fellowship for study of environmental finance in the Asia-Pacific and a Fulbright Fellowship for study of sustainable decision-making in Iceland. Janelle is the author of a number of peer-reviewed works in prestigious journals and presses. She serves as an editor of the Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society.