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Item – Theses Canada
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Item – Theses Canada
OCLC number
1333975963
Link(s) to full text
LAC copy
Author
Gordon, David Jeremy.
Title
From Global Cities to Global Governors: Power, Politics, and the Convergence of Urban Climate Governance.
Degree
Ph.D. -- University of Toronto, 2016.
Publisher
[Toronto, Ontario] : University of Toronto, 2016
Description
1 online resource
Abstract
Cities are increasingly included in discussions of climate governance and lauded as sources of innovation, leadership, and experimentation. But can they succeed where states have failed in producing meaningful collective actions and effects? To respond to this pressing question requires understanding whether cities can achieve more than rhetorical commitment to coordinated action, whether they can come together and coordinate their actions. To answer this question my dissertation addresses the puzzling ability of the C40 Climate Leadership Group to achieve internal coherence. Leveraging a novel dataset of over 4700 discrete urban climate governance actions, I demonstrate empirically that the cities of the C40 have come not only to cohere around a common project, employ common practices of climate governance, but that the C40 has converged around a common set of governance norms: shared ideas as to the role of cities in global climate governance, the ways in which cities can and should engage in governance, and how governance should be practiced. I introduce a novel conceptual framework that interweaves elements of social constructivism and network analysis with Bourdieu's social field theory, and demonstrate how reconceiving the C40 as a governance field illuminates currents of power that operate beneath the still waters of nominal and voluntary cooperation, and provides a means of explaining how convergence has been pursued, contested, and produced by actors who claim and wield various sorts of power and authority. The dissertation applies this novel conceptual apparatus to demonstrate why contestation was paramount between 2005 and 2010, and how convergence was produced from 2011 on. Put simply, the C40 only achieved convergence once there was an actor with enough power to overcome resistance and secure complicity from its members, with such power translated into influence through the mechanism of recognition.
Other link(s)
tspace.library.utoronto.ca
hdl.handle.net
Subject
C40
Cities and Climate Change
City-Networks
Climate Change
Climate Governance
Governance Field
Date modified:
2022-09-01