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The ambiguity of federalism in climate policy-making: how the political system in Austria hinders mitigation and facilitates adaptation
Authors:Reinhard Steurer  Christoph Clar
Institution:InFER - Institute of Forest, Environmental, and Natural Resource Policy, BOKU – University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria
Abstract:Although the impacts of federalism on environmental policy-making are still contested, many policy analysts emphasise its advantages in climate policy-making. This applies to the mitigation of climate change, in particular when federal governments (as in the U.S.) are inactive. More recently, federalism is also expected to empower sub-national actors in adapting to local impacts of climate change. The present paper analyses the role federalism in Austria played in greening the decentralised building sector (relevant for mitigation) on the one hand, and in improving regional flood risk management (relevant for adaptation) on the other. In line with the so-called matching school of the environmental federalism research strand we conclude that Austrian federalism proved to be more appropriate for regional flood protection than for mitigating climate change. We highlight that it is not federalism per se but federalism embedded in various contextual factors that shape environmental policy-making. Among these factors are the spatial scale of an environmental problem, the nitty-gritty of polity systems, and national politics (such as federal positions on climate change mitigation).
Keywords:Climate change mitigation  climate change adaptation  climate policy integration/CPI  building policies  flood risk management  federalism  environmental federalism  Austria
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