New Troubles for the West: Debt Relief, Climate Change, and Comparative Foreign Policy in the Post-Cold War Era, Volumes 1-2Georgetown University, 2004 - 1048 pages |
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Page 135
... continue to move the position of other governments but had to work within the art of the possible . Campaigners also benefit from some distance from the government , lest they be seen as co - opted . Thus , while the campaign would ...
... continue to move the position of other governments but had to work within the art of the possible . Campaigners also benefit from some distance from the government , lest they be seen as co - opted . Thus , while the campaign would ...
Page 256
... continue to pump billions of tons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere with no ill effect , and that any effort to reduce emissions will stall the engines of industrialism that protect us from a Hobbesian wilderness.215 What led the ...
... continue to pump billions of tons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere with no ill effect , and that any effort to reduce emissions will stall the engines of industrialism that protect us from a Hobbesian wilderness.215 What led the ...
Page 358
... Institute210 and various renewables organizations like the Business Council for Sustainable Energy , have and continue to advocate for their own 209 Lane 2003 . 211 industries as replacements to fossils fuels . While individual 358.
... Institute210 and various renewables organizations like the Business Council for Sustainable Energy , have and continue to advocate for their own 209 Lane 2003 . 211 industries as replacements to fossils fuels . While individual 358.
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Normative Issue Acceptance and Strategic Framing | 21 |
Jubilee 2000 and the Campaign for Developing Country Debt Relief | 66 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
actors advanced industrialized advocacy advocates agreement allies American argued argument Available Betsill bilateral debt binding emissions reductions British Bush carbon Chancellor chapter climate change climate mitigation climate policy Clinton Administration coalition Cologne commitments communicative action concerns consensus costly moral action creditors cultural debt relief decision-makers developing countries discussed domestic economic efforts embrace emissions trading energy Environment environmental community environmental groups European European Union Finance flexibility mechanisms foreign policy Fund German Marshall Fund Germany global warming greenhouse gas Greenpeace high costs HIPC implementation influence Institute interest International Criminal Court Japan Japanese Kyoto Protocol leaders leadership levels loans million Ministry multilateral NGOs normative issues Oxfam parties policymakers political potential predict President Prime Minister problem ratify reduction target Republican rhetorical role Schreurs Senate strategic framing suggested Summit support debt relief treaty U.S. and Europe ultimately Undated United utilitarian values veto players