Browsing by Subject "mitigation"
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(2024)The global climate change regime can certainly be referred to as the most challenging regime ever negotiated in human history. The reasons are various, with one of the most significant being the longstanding North-South divide in environmental politics. The question of how to distribute the mitigation obligations has been surrounding climate change regime from its inception. The Paris Agreement, which managed to overcome the strict approach to differentiation by adding the phrase ‘in light of different national circumstances’ to the principle of CBDR-RC, offered a shift towards the less demanding, ‘bottom-up’ framework tailored to address the differing national circumstances. Accordingly, Paris’s flexible, dynamic approach to differentiation contributed to creating a framework acceptable to all. Furthermore, due to its hybrid architecture, it also managed to act as an orchestrator not only for the state but also for non-state action. However, it appears that these accomplishments have diverted our attention from the distributional challenges inherent in the Agreement. Consequently, the notion that the Paris regime has resolved North-South tensions is far from reality. Aligned with these concerns, this thesis endeavors to reemphasize and reintroduce the equity concerns at the forefront of the agenda. To achieve this objective, this thesis initially explores the historical development of differential treatment within the global climate change regime, examining the underlying power dynamics in this process. Subsequently, it also aims to critically reflect on the current regime and identify whether the existing framework contributes to inequitable mitigation burden-sharing.
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(2020)This thesis sets out to investigate what frames are used in the U.S. media to discuss responsibility for climate change. Particularly, the study seeks to identify what frames are used to discuss action for climate change mitigation. The normative framework for analyzing responsibility is established by the social connection model by Iris Marion Young, which presents a forward-looking approach for addressing responsibility for issues of structural injustice. The theoretical framework of this thesis derives from existing literature on climate change, the media, and media framing. The study was conducted using a qualitative method of frame analysis. Data for the study was collected from the digital contents of three popular news media outlets in the United States: CNN, Fox News Channel, and The New York Times. The data consists of news articles that were published online in December 2019. The results of the study indicate that responsibility for climate change mitigation is rarely approached directly in the media. Rather, it is implied through discussions about what actions should be taken. The study identifies four main frames of responsibility. The first frame emphasizes the conflict between the younger and older generations and deems that collective efforts are required to address the situation. The second frame accentuates the political division over the issue of climate change by casting blame upon Asian nations while downplaying the respective responsibility of the United States. Similarly, the efforts of the Democratic party are ridiculed. The third frame emphasizes consumer action through practical efforts but does not promote buying less as a possible solution. Lastly, the study identifies a frame, in which corporate responsibility is approached in two ways: to hold highly polluting industries accountable and to promote green business as a solution. The study finds that the framing employed by Fox News Channel emphasizes the economic disadvantages of climate change mitigation and sees it as an issue of causal responsibility for Asian nations. On the other hand, the findings of the study suggest that the media coverage of the youth protests against climate change often yield notions of collective responsibility and frame the issue of responsibility in a more contextualized setting. The findings of the study support existing research of how media frames the issue of climate change and how polarization affects the framing. Through the application of the social connection model, the findings of this study contribute to the literature of news framing of climate change by demonstrating how the issue of responsibility is framed.
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