Climate Change and Foreign Policy: Case
Studies from East to West and its companion volume,
Environmental Change and Foreign Policy: Theory and
Practice, examine and explain the role of foreign
policy politics, processes and institutions in efforts
to protect the environment and natural resources. They
seek to highlight international efforts to address
human-induced changes to the natural environment,
analyze the actors and institutions that constrain and
shape actions on environmental issues, show how
environmental changes influence foreign policy
processes, and critically assess environmental foreign
policies. This book examines the problem of global
climate change and assesses the manner in which
governments and other actors have attempted to deal with
it. It presents a series of in-depth international case
studies on climate policy in Australia, Japan, China,
Turkey, Hungary, Denmark, France, the European Union and
the United States. The authors demonstrate how studying
environmental foreign policy can help us to better
understand how governments, businesses and civil society
actors address—or fail to address—the critical problem
climate change. This book will be of strong interest
to scholars and students of environmental policy and
politics, foreign policy, public policy, climate change
and international relations.
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