Saltar para:
Logótipo
Comuta visibilidade da coluna esquerda
Você está em: Início > Publicações > Visualização > Peru at the UNFCCC: explaining the country’s foreign climate policy

Publicações

Peru at the UNFCCC: explaining the country’s foreign climate policy

Título
Peru at the UNFCCC: explaining the country’s foreign climate policy
Tipo
Artigo em Revista Científica Internacional
Ano
2023
Autores
Pereira, Joana Castro
(Autor)
FLUP
Ver página pessoal Sem permissões para visualizar e-mail institucional Pesquisar Publicações do Participante Sem AUTHENTICUS Sem ORCID
Revista
Título: Climate PolicyImportada do Authenticus Pesquisar Publicações da Revista
Vol. 23 2
Páginas: 212-225
ISSN: 1469-3062
Editora: Taylor & Francis
Indexação
Publicação em Scopus Scopus
Econlit
Current Contents
EBSCO
Outras Informações
Resumo (PT):
Abstract (EN): Peru was one of the first developing countries to commit to a voluntary emissions reduction target and is seen as a bridge builder within the UNFCCC. It played an important role in advancing the multilateral climate process between 2013 and 2015. Peru is a member of the Independent Alliance of Latin America and the Caribbean (AILAC), a progressive coalition of countries that promotes ambitious positions within the climate regime. Although the country’s level of activism in international negotiations has markedly declined since 2016, there have been no significant changes in its foreign position. What factors explain Peru’s conciliatory and relatively progressive stance at the UNFCCC? To answer this question, I use the ‘climate commitment approach’ as analytical framework and trace the processes that link possible causes with outcomes, comparing two different periods in the trajectory of Peru’s participation in the climate regime. The study is based on semi-structured interviews, governmental publications and data, reports and studies by independent organizations, news reports, and scientific literature. It concludes that Peru’s position in the UNFCCC negotiations has been mainly determined by the dominant presence of Peru’s Ministry of Environment (MINAM) in foreign climate policy decision-making as well as of individual agents who act as climate leaders. It also points to several other factors that determine its position: the low level of interest in, or understanding of, the climate issue by domestic pressure groups; the country’s international profile; the governmental perception of economic, political, and diplomatic benefits associated with a more ambitious climate position; and the wish to access international climate financing.
Idioma: Inglês
Tipo (Avaliação Docente): Científica
Notas: Received 04 Aug 2021, Accepted 30 Jun 2022, Published online: 18 Jul 2022
Documentos
Não foi encontrado nenhum documento associado à publicação.
Publicações Relacionadas

Dos mesmos autores

Global Catastrophic Risks 2022: a year of colliding consequences (2022)
Relatório Técnico
Waaghals, Kajsa; Pereira, Joana Castro
Animals in world politics (2023)
Outras Publicações
Pereira, Joana Castro
Non-human nature in world politics : theory and practice (2020)
Livro
Pereira, Joana Castro; Saramago, André
Building capabilities for earth system governance (2024)
Livro
Prantl, Jochen ; Barros-Platiau, Ana Flávia; Inoue, Cristina Yumie Aoki; Pereira, Joana Castro; Ribeiro, Thais Lemos ; Viola, Eduardo

Ver todas (18)

Da mesma revista

Muddling through with climate change targets: a multi-level governance perspective on the transport sector (2014)
Artigo em Revista Científica Internacional
António Cunha Ferreira; Greg Marsden, ; Ian Bache,; Matthew Flinders ; Ian Bartle
Recomendar Página Voltar ao Topo
Copyright 1996-2025 © Faculdade de Direito da Universidade do Porto  I Termos e Condições  I Acessibilidade  I Índice A-Z
Página gerada em: 2025-08-23 às 00:10:15 | Política de Privacidade | Política de Proteção de Dados Pessoais | Denúncias