Dana R. Fisher. 2004. National Governance and the Global Climate
Change Regime. Rowman and Littlefield Publishers
How do
domestic interests affect international policymaking?
What is the
role of the nation-state within multilateral regimes?

How can we understand
the diversity of state responses to the internationalization of environmental
regulation? National Governance and the Global Climate Change Regime
compares the roles of different actors and institutions in international
environmental policymaking. It focuses on the formation of a legally binding
treaty to reduce greenhouse gases, the Kyoto Protocol, to show how domestic
interests affect international treaty negotiations. Dana Fisher combines
quantitative analysis of social, economic, and environmental data for the
member-states of the OECD with qualitative case studies of three key countries,
the United States, Japan, and the Netherlands. She argues compellingly that
domestic debates within states and subsequent national policy formation have a significantly
larger role in international environmental regime formation than many scholars
recognize.
Link to the three
myths of the Kyoto Protocol
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