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In
The Political Economy of Climate Finance Effectiveness in Developing Countries, Mark Purdon contributes to broader debates on the international climate cooperation by evaluating how three different climate finance instruments have been undertaken in three countries--Tanzania, Uganda, and Moldova--and evaluates their effectiveness in actually reducing emissions. He shows that the effectiveness of climate finance tools depends on the interaction between a nation's development policy paradigms and its interests in other sectors of their economies. Purdon's findings further inform the design of international and transnational efforts to engage developing countries on climate change mitigation by emphasizing the importance of domestic politics and the state.
List of contents
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- PART 1: Global Ideas About Climate and Development Cooperation
- Chapter 2: The CDM and Liberal Environmentalism
- Chapter 3: The Shift to Developmental Environmentalism
- PART 2: Comparative Political Economy of Development
- Chapter 4: Development Policy Paradigms in Historical Perspective
- Chapter 5: Political Settlements in Tanzania, Uganda, and Moldova
- Chapter 6: State Development Interests in Tanzania, Uganda, and Moldova
- Chapter 7: Development Policy Paradigms in Tanzania, Uganda, and Moldova
- PART 3: Evaluating Climate Finance Effectiveness
- Chapter 8: Pockets of CDM Effectiveness
- Chapter 9: Explaining REDD+ Effectiveness
- Chapter 10: Explaining NAMA Effectiveness
- Chapter 11: Conclusion
- Appendix 1: Supplementary Information about Carbon Offset Projects
- Appendix 2: Evaluation Criteria by DNA and by State Investment Agencies
- References
- Notes
- Index
About the author
Mark Purdon is Associate Professor in the Department of Strategy, Social and Environmental Responsibility at the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) where he holds the Chair in Decarbonization. He is an expert in the emerging field of comparative environmental policy, which combines elements of comparative politics, comparative public policy and international relations. He is particularly interested in the relationship between climate change policy and political economy and has extensive research experience in both developing and developed countries. Purdon earned a PhD in political science at the University of Toronto in 2013 and completed a Postdoctoral Fellowship at the London School of Economics in 2014.
Summary
There is ample evidence that engaging developing countries on climate change mitigation would have significant, positive impacts on global climate efforts. There is much debate, however, on the most effective strategy for unlocking these low-cost mitigation opportunities. While the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) emerged as the main climate finance instrument for engaging developing countries under the Kyoto Protocol, the carbon market approach it embodied would largely be replaced by a new array of climate finance instruments based on climate funds.
In The Political Economy of Climate Finance Effectiveness in Developing Countries, Mark Purdon shows that the effectiveness of climate finance instruments to reduce emissions under either strategy has depended on the interaction between prevailing ideas about how to develop a nation's economy, as well as state interests in various economic sectors. Based on multiple field visits over a decade in three countries, the author demonstrates that climate finance instruments have been more effectively implemented when the state treats them as vehicles for addressing priority development issues. Climate finance instruments were more consistently and effectively implemented in Uganda and Moldova than Tanzania, despite differences in state capacity between countries. This pattern held for the CDM, as well as subsequent instruments largely based on climate funds, such as Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) and other national mitigation actions.
Contributing to broader debates on international climate cooperation, Purdon's findings inform international efforts to support national climate plans and catalyze low-carbon development by emphasizing the importance of domestic politics and the state.
Additional text
This book is an empirically rich exploration of the politics of transition to low-carbon development in low-income countries. By taking a historically grounded, comparative analysis of climate finance implementation in Tanzania, Uganda, and Moldova, Purdon offers an illuminating contribution to the growing literature on developmental environmentalism. The book presents key findings from a decade-long investigation and reveals how the developmental state remains central amidst a plethora of global environmental norms. A must read for anyone interested in recentring the state in the politics of climate finance within the global south.