The Political Prospects of Geoengineering: An Assessment of the Convention on Biological Diversity and the London Convention
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2020Abstract
This dissertation investigates the ways in which geoengineering interlinks with global
environmental politics (GEP) and how they cohere together. The core question is how
geoengineering fits in today’s political context and how it affects this. To this end, the bulk of
this paper aims to analyse two political regimes that have set a regulatory framework for
geoengineering activities - the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the London
Convention (LC) - and explore how these contribute to shape climate politics and governance.
To do so, I conduct content analysis of their resolutions and combine it with primary literature
and interviews to geoengineering experts. My research firstly reveals that the CBD brings a
more multilateral and cross-disciplinary approach to environmental politics. Secondly, the LC
makes a call for more research and science-based mechanisms as a means to shed light on
decision-making processes. Despite these, I argue that geoengineering does not play a major
role in GEP due to the lack of scientific research, political adherence, and governance
framework. It remains to be seen whether and how geoengineering will acquire political and
institutional stability in the future. Heretofore, my hope is that this research may prove useful
in tracing some of the first implications of geoengineering in the political domain.
Document Type
Project / Final year job or degree
Language
English
Keywords
Relacions internacionals
TFG
Política ambiental
Canvis climàtics
Pages
74 p.
Note
TFG del Grau en Relacions Internacionals tutoritzat per Oscar Mateos
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Rights
© L'autor/a
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/