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National identities,international roles,and the legitimation of climate leadership: Germany and Norway compared
Authors:Robyn Eckersley
Institution:1. School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australiar.eckersley@unimelb.edu.au
Abstract:The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) confers an obligation on developed states to lead in mitigation. This obligation challenges traditional conceptions of the modern state by calling forth a more outward looking state that is able to serve both the national and international communities in the service of global climate protection. Yet, the more skeptical theories of the ecological state suggest that climate leaders will only emerge if they can connect their climate strategy to the traditional state imperatives of economic growth or national security. How the governments of Germany and Norway, both relative climate leaders with ongoing fossil-fuel dependencies, have legitimated their climate policies and diplomacy is examined through a comparative discourse analysis. While both governments rely heavily on discourses of Green growth, they also construct national identities and international role conceptions that serve purposes beyond themselves.
Keywords:climate leadership  discourse analysis  Germany  international role conception  national identity  Norway
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