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Conference of the Parties Meetings as Regularly Scheduled Critical Events for Global Climate Governance: Reflecting on COP 26 and the Glasgow Climate Pact

Mark C. J. Stoddart, David B. Tindall, Maria Brockhaus, Marlene Kammerer

2023Society & Natural Resources14 citationsDOI

Abstract

In this commentary, we reflect on COP26, its outcomes, and the UNFCCC processes. While the value and results of COP meetings are often contested by researchers and activists, we highlight three areas that deserve more attention in post-COP assessments. First, the COP process creates an arena where state leaders, researchers, climate activists, and private actors regularly meet, which facilitates cooperation over time. Second, COP meetings are sites of parallel multi-level games that often result in bilateral or multilateral side agreements or initiatives. Third, COP meetings are regularly scheduled critical events, where social movements and civil society actors shape the public discourse around climate change. Our brief analysis illustrates there is still an urgent need for COP meetings as spaces that provide transparency for global climate governance, as well as media and public visibility for civil society voices, which would otherwise be lost.

Topics & Concepts

Transparency (behavior)Civil societyCorporate governancePolitical scienceClimate governanceClimate changePublic administrationPublic relationsLawEconomicsManagementPoliticsEcologyBiologySustainability and Climate Change GovernanceClimate Change Policy and EconomicsClimate Change and Geoengineering
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