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The Politics of Carbon Markets Routledge Studies in Environmental Policy Series

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Stephan Benjamin, Lane Richard

Couverture de l’ouvrage The Politics of Carbon Markets

The carbon markets are in the middle of a fundamental crisis - a crisis marked by collapsing prices, fleeing actors, and ever increasing greenhouse gas levels. Yet carbon trading remains at the heart of global attempts to respond to climate change. Not only this, but markets continue to proliferate - particularly in the Global South.

The Politics of Carbon Markets helps to make sense of this paradox and brings two urgently needed insights to the analysis of carbon markets. First, the markets must be understood in relation to the politics involved in their development, maintenance and opposition. Second, this politics is multiform and pervasive. Implementation of new techniques and measuring tools, policy development and contestation, and the structuring context of institutional settings and macro-social forces all involve a variety of political actors and create new forms of political agency. The contributions study the total extent of the carbon markets, from their prehistory to their contemporary expansion and wider impacts.

This wide-ranging political perspective on the carbon markets is invaluable to those studying and interested in ecological markets, climate change governance and environmental politics.

1. Zombie markets or zombie analyses? Revivifying the politics of carbon marketsPart 1: The politics of carbon before carbon 2. Resources For the Future, resources for growth: the making of the 1975 growth ban3. Politics by other means. The making of the emissions trading instrument as a 'pre-history' of carbon trading4. Allometric equations and timber markets: an important forerunner of REDD+?5. Virtuous Carbon Part 2: The Politics of Carbon 6. A Neo-Gramscian Account of Carbon Markets: The Cases of the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme and the Clean Development Mechanism7. The politics of carbon markets in the global South8. Carbon governance in China by the creation of a carbon market9. The currencies of carbon: carbon money and its social meaningPart 3: The politics of carbon after carbon 10. The Politics of Researching Carbon Trading in Australia 11. Dialogue of the Deaf? The CDM's Legimitation Crisis12. The Post- and Future Politics of Green Economy and REDD+13. Political sellout! Carbon markets between depoliticising and repoliticising climate politics

Postgraduate

Benjamin Stephan is a postdoctoral researcher at the Centre for Globalisation and Governance, Hamburg University, Germany.

Richard Lane is a PhD researcher at the Centre for Global Political Economy, University of Sussex, UK.