The "Super-Network": Fostering Interaction Between Human Rights and Climate Change Institutions

This article contributes to understanding unique forms of actor constellations and their tactics in fostering institutional interaction. It explores interaction processes between the human rights and the climate regime, and more specifically, the incorporation of human rights in the 2015 Paris clima...

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Main Author: Andrea Schapper
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bamberg Press 2021-02-01
Series:Complexity, Governance & Networks
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/ojs/index.php/cgn/article/view/102
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spelling doaj-3e915bd7b424466797281a8f08d00e062021-03-24T09:49:54ZengUniversity of Bamberg PressComplexity, Governance & Networks2214-29912214-30092021-02-0161324510.20377/cgn-10263The "Super-Network": Fostering Interaction Between Human Rights and Climate Change InstitutionsAndrea Schapper0Division of History, Heritage and Politics, University of StirlingThis article contributes to understanding unique forms of actor constellations and their tactics in fostering institutional interaction. It explores interaction processes between the human rights and the climate regime, and more specifically, the incorporation of human rights in the 2015 Paris climate agreement. During the Paris negotiations, an inter-constituency alliance comprised of environmental movements, human rights organizations, gender activists, indigenous peoples’ representatives, trade unions, youth groups and faith-based organizations successfully lobbied for the incorporation of rights principles into the new climate instrument. I argue that this alliance can be grasped as a "super-network", a network above several individual transnational advocacy networks (TANs), that works across policy fields and uses information, symbols and stories, as well as accountability and leverage politics to foster interaction between a source institution (human rights regime) and a target institution (climate regime). By employing a package approach, which reiterates a core message of common principles individual networks have agreed on, the "super-network" changed the practices of governments in international negotiations and fostered inter-institutional interaction. Empirically, my research is mainly based on expert interviews and participatory observations at the strategic meetings of TANs at three different climate negotiations in Warsaw (2013), Paris (2015) and Bonn (2017), including follow-up skype interviews with key experts between 2013 and 2020.https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/ojs/index.php/cgn/article/view/102transnational advocacy networksinstitutional interactionhuman rightsclimate changeparis agreement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Schapper
spellingShingle Andrea Schapper
The "Super-Network": Fostering Interaction Between Human Rights and Climate Change Institutions
Complexity, Governance & Networks
transnational advocacy networks
institutional interaction
human rights
climate change
paris agreement
author_facet Andrea Schapper
author_sort Andrea Schapper
title The "Super-Network": Fostering Interaction Between Human Rights and Climate Change Institutions
title_short The "Super-Network": Fostering Interaction Between Human Rights and Climate Change Institutions
title_full The "Super-Network": Fostering Interaction Between Human Rights and Climate Change Institutions
title_fullStr The "Super-Network": Fostering Interaction Between Human Rights and Climate Change Institutions
title_full_unstemmed The "Super-Network": Fostering Interaction Between Human Rights and Climate Change Institutions
title_sort "super-network": fostering interaction between human rights and climate change institutions
publisher University of Bamberg Press
series Complexity, Governance & Networks
issn 2214-2991
2214-3009
publishDate 2021-02-01
description This article contributes to understanding unique forms of actor constellations and their tactics in fostering institutional interaction. It explores interaction processes between the human rights and the climate regime, and more specifically, the incorporation of human rights in the 2015 Paris climate agreement. During the Paris negotiations, an inter-constituency alliance comprised of environmental movements, human rights organizations, gender activists, indigenous peoples’ representatives, trade unions, youth groups and faith-based organizations successfully lobbied for the incorporation of rights principles into the new climate instrument. I argue that this alliance can be grasped as a "super-network", a network above several individual transnational advocacy networks (TANs), that works across policy fields and uses information, symbols and stories, as well as accountability and leverage politics to foster interaction between a source institution (human rights regime) and a target institution (climate regime). By employing a package approach, which reiterates a core message of common principles individual networks have agreed on, the "super-network" changed the practices of governments in international negotiations and fostered inter-institutional interaction. Empirically, my research is mainly based on expert interviews and participatory observations at the strategic meetings of TANs at three different climate negotiations in Warsaw (2013), Paris (2015) and Bonn (2017), including follow-up skype interviews with key experts between 2013 and 2020.
topic transnational advocacy networks
institutional interaction
human rights
climate change
paris agreement
url https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/ojs/index.php/cgn/article/view/102
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