1. The climate change metanarrative, state of exception and China's modernisation.
- Author
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McCarthy, Greg
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,CLIMATE change ,NEOLIBERALISM ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries ,EMERGING markets ,SOVEREIGNTY ,POLITICAL stability - Abstract
Part one will argue that the climate change discourse has all the hallmarks of a new metanarrative. However, the emergence of this metanarrative was in contradiction to neoliberal theory of the environment. Therefore, in an effort to reconcile the two metanarratives, an economic discourse emerged that conceptualised climate change with the neoliberal market model. The economic merging of climate change and the market discourses proved politically unsustainable, as was evident at the Copenhagen Climate Change Summit. Part two places the contradictions between the climate change-come-neoliberal metanarrative into a global political context, arguing that neoliberalism has so marginalised many developing countries that their sovereignty is in question, with a state of exception always in play. As such, they are highly vulnerable to any global climate change solution imposed by the corporate market on them. Lastly, the paper will argue that China is unique in its response to climate change. It is a rapidly developing state with a unique history of modernisation that places it in a position to use non-market means to address climate change. What limits the Chinese state from doing so is the political instability that this would cause to the Chinese Communist Party's legitimacy built on socialist-capitalist modernisation and by the vested interests tied to economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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