Policy and political consequences of mandatory climate impact assessments: an explorative study of German cities and municipalities

Since May 2019, several German cities and municipalities have declared a ‘climate emergency’, an action which makes climate impact assessments mandatory for all projects or policy proposals. How have the processes in the local governments changed in response to the emergency status? How have the pro...

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Main Authors: Benedikt Rilling, Jale Tosun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-01-01
Series:Policy & Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14494035.2021.1907901
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spelling doaj-5c29e43e28064ec68528c5d8ef7f64f02021-06-21T12:25:19ZengTaylor & Francis GroupPolicy & Society1449-40351839-33732021-01-014019911510.1080/14494035.2021.19079011907901Policy and political consequences of mandatory climate impact assessments: an explorative study of German cities and municipalitiesBenedikt Rilling0Jale Tosun1Institute of Political Science, Heidelberg UniversityInstitute of Political Science, Heidelberg UniversitySince May 2019, several German cities and municipalities have declared a ‘climate emergency’, an action which makes climate impact assessments mandatory for all projects or policy proposals. How have the processes in the local governments changed in response to the emergency status? How have the processes in the city and municipal councils changed? And how, if at all, has the relationship between elected politicians (who make up the city and municipal councils) and bureaucrats (who make up the local government) changed? Based on 13 interviews carried out with representatives of city and municipal councils and local governments, we show, first, that local governments expect a higher workload and to spend more time on cross-sectoral coordination and cooperation. Second, the issue of climate change is now part of the political agenda in the local councils. Third, the administrative actors are now in a stronger position vis-à-vis the political ones as they can de facto veto projects or policies. Overall, we conclude that local-level climate politics has changed following the declaration of the emergency status; however, the design of the corresponding policies has not changed to reflect the cross-sectoral character of responses to climate change.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14494035.2021.1907901bureaucracyclimate emergencyclimate impact assessmenthorizontal policy integrationlocal governmentlocal parliament
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benedikt Rilling
Jale Tosun
spellingShingle Benedikt Rilling
Jale Tosun
Policy and political consequences of mandatory climate impact assessments: an explorative study of German cities and municipalities
Policy & Society
bureaucracy
climate emergency
climate impact assessment
horizontal policy integration
local government
local parliament
author_facet Benedikt Rilling
Jale Tosun
author_sort Benedikt Rilling
title Policy and political consequences of mandatory climate impact assessments: an explorative study of German cities and municipalities
title_short Policy and political consequences of mandatory climate impact assessments: an explorative study of German cities and municipalities
title_full Policy and political consequences of mandatory climate impact assessments: an explorative study of German cities and municipalities
title_fullStr Policy and political consequences of mandatory climate impact assessments: an explorative study of German cities and municipalities
title_full_unstemmed Policy and political consequences of mandatory climate impact assessments: an explorative study of German cities and municipalities
title_sort policy and political consequences of mandatory climate impact assessments: an explorative study of german cities and municipalities
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Policy & Society
issn 1449-4035
1839-3373
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Since May 2019, several German cities and municipalities have declared a ‘climate emergency’, an action which makes climate impact assessments mandatory for all projects or policy proposals. How have the processes in the local governments changed in response to the emergency status? How have the processes in the city and municipal councils changed? And how, if at all, has the relationship between elected politicians (who make up the city and municipal councils) and bureaucrats (who make up the local government) changed? Based on 13 interviews carried out with representatives of city and municipal councils and local governments, we show, first, that local governments expect a higher workload and to spend more time on cross-sectoral coordination and cooperation. Second, the issue of climate change is now part of the political agenda in the local councils. Third, the administrative actors are now in a stronger position vis-à-vis the political ones as they can de facto veto projects or policies. Overall, we conclude that local-level climate politics has changed following the declaration of the emergency status; however, the design of the corresponding policies has not changed to reflect the cross-sectoral character of responses to climate change.
topic bureaucracy
climate emergency
climate impact assessment
horizontal policy integration
local government
local parliament
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14494035.2021.1907901
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