Climate Assemblies
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Edited by:
Oliver Escobar
and Stephen Elstub
About this book
Climate Assemblies are capturing the imagination of people interested in how citizens can participate in decision-making to address the climate and ecological crisis. Traditional institutions are struggling to cope with the challenges of a climate-changed world.
Climate Assemblies are new civic institutions that include a cross-section of the public in deliberation to influence environmental policy, governance, public discourse and collective action. With the rapid spread of this approach to public engagement, practice has developed well in advance of research. This book addresses that gap by analysing the internal and external dimensions of climate assemblies and how they interact.
It brings together 25 authors to offer novel perspectives, critical insights and practical reflections based on original research about paradigmatic cases at local, national, transnational and global levels. The book investigates the state of the field, reflects on the hope and hype about this growing phenomenon, and proposes ways to improve climate assemblies so that they can make a difference in a climate-changed world.
- First edited collection solely focused on climate assemblies.
- Draws on novel theoretical and empirical approaches that bring new light into critical issues.
- Analyses how the internal and external dimensions of climate assemblies intertwine.
Author / Editor information
Oliver Escobar is Professor of Public Policy and Democratic Innovation at the School of Social and Political Sciences of the University of Edinburgh. He co-directed What Works Scotland and combines research and practice across policy and community contexts.
Stephen Elstub is Professor of Democratic Politics, School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology, Newcastle University. He is a Fellow of the Tyndall Centre and Chair of the European Consortium of Political Research’s Democratic Innovations Standing Group.
Topics
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Frontmatter
I -
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Dedication
V -
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Contents
VII -
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Acknowledgements
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List of contributors
XI -
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List of tables
XIII -
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List of figures
XV -
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List of boxes
XVII - Section 1 Introduction
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Chapter 1 The present of climate assemblies
3 - Section 2 Internal dimensions in climate assemblies
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Chapter 2 Setting the agenda for climate assemblies: Key dimensions and dilemmas
27 -
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Chapter 3 Global facilitation revisited: The many stages of climate assemblies
47 -
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Chapter 4 The role of experts in climate assemblies: Recruitment and inclusion
65 -
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Chapter 5 How does climate change expertise shape the form of a climate assembly? (and vice versa)
83 - Section 3 External dimensions in climate assemblies
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Chapter 6 Climate assemblies and communicative flows: A conceptual framework for studying media and communication in deliberative systems
103 -
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Chapter 7 Between closure and openness: The fragile legitimacy of the French Citizens’ Climate Convention
119 -
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Chapter 8 Can democratic innovation work in an unfavourable political context? Assessing the effectiveness of the first Hungarian climate assembly
137 -
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Chapter 9 The Global Climate Assembly: A new global deliberative space?
155 - Section 4 Conclusion
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Chapter 10 The future of climate assemblies
175 -
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Index
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