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Analyses the political dynamics of climate policy in affluent democracies from a number of different theoretical angles in order to improve our understanding of which political strategies would be likely to enable national governments to make deep cuts in GHG emissions while avoiding significant political damage.
This book analyses the political dynamics of climate policy in affluent democracies from different theoretical angles to reveal which political strategies would be likely to enable national governments to make deep cuts in GHG emissions while avoiding significant political damage.
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Produktbeschreibung
Analyses the political dynamics of climate policy in affluent democracies from a number of different theoretical angles in order to improve our understanding of which political strategies would be likely to enable national governments to make deep cuts in GHG emissions while avoiding significant political damage.
This book analyses the political dynamics of climate policy in affluent democracies from different theoretical angles to reveal which political strategies would be likely to enable national governments to make deep cuts in GHG emissions while avoiding significant political damage. This book was previously published as a special issue of Environmental Politics.
Autorenporträt
Hugh Compston is Reader in Politics in the School of European Studies at Cardiff University, UK. Major publications include Policy Networks and Policy Change (Palgrave, 2009), Turning Down the Heat: The Politics of Climate Policy in Affluent Democracies (ed. with Ian Bailey, Palgrave, 2008), King Trends and the Future of Public Policy (Palgrave, 2006), Handbook of Public Policy in Europe: Britain, France and Germany (edited, Palgrave, 2004), Social Partnership in the European Union (edited with Justin Greenwood, Palgrave, 2001), Policy Concertation and Social Partnership (edited with Stefan Berger, Berghahn, 2002), and The New Politics of Unemployment (edited, Routledge, 1996) as well as numerous journal articles on public policy and political economy.