Loss and damage: a critical discourse analysis of Parties' positions in climate change negotiations

被引:25
|
作者
Calliari, Elisa [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Fdn Eni Enrico Mattei, Euromediterranean Ctr, Venice, Italy
[2] Ca Foscari Univ, Venice, Italy
[3] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Laxenburg, Austria
关键词
loss and damage; climate change negotiations; critical discourse analysis; compensation; climate justice; VULNERABILITY; ADAPTATION; LIMITS; RISK;
D O I
10.1080/13669877.2016.1240706
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
The years-long negotiations on loss and damage (L&D) associated with climate change impacts reached a milestone with the adoption of the Paris Agreement, sanctioning the permanence of the Warsaw International Mechanism (WIM) created in 2013. The WIM aims at advancing knowledge gathering, coordination and support to address L&D associated with extreme and slow onset events in vulnerable developing countries (Decision 2/CP.19). Despite being among the most controversial issues to be recently treated in climate change negotiation, L&D has attracted little attention in the field of international relations. This paper aims at addressing this gap by reconstructing the emergence and evolution of the negotiating positions on L&D of developing and developed countries. It employs a critical discourse analytical approach and builds on Fairclough's three-dimensional framework for critical discourse analysis, taking decision 2/CP.19 as the core communicative event. Consistently, the decision is analysed at three different levels: as a text (micro-scale); as a discursive practice (meso-scale); and as a social practice (macro-scale). The analysis makes use of a wide range of materials including previous decisions, High Level Segment statements and Parties submissions. It reconstructs Parties' conflicting views on the positioning of L&D vis-a-vis the adaptation space (L&D as a part of, or as beyond adaptation) and the scientific, ethical and legal arguments employed to support these standpoints. It highlights, in particular, the strategic importance which the compensation argument' had in determining developing countries' capacity to influence the UNFCCC process up to the inclusion of a specific article on L&D in the Paris Agreement. While calls for compensation might have lost momentum as a result of the Warsaw and Paris talks, the paper argues that their potential is far from exhausted. They in fact imply a more general request for climate justice which the UNFCCC has not yet addressed.
引用
收藏
页码:725 / 747
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Characterizing loss and damage from climate change
    James, Rachel
    Otto, Friederike
    Parker, Hannah
    Boyd, Emily
    Cornforth, Rosalind
    Mitchell, Daniel
    Allen, Myles
    [J]. NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2014, 4 (11) : 938 - 939
  • [22] Characterizing loss and damage from climate change
    Rachel James
    Friederike Otto
    Hannah Parker
    Emily Boyd
    Rosalind Cornforth
    Daniel Mitchell
    Myles Allen
    [J]. Nature Climate Change, 2014, 4 : 938 - 939
  • [23] Critical Discourse Analysis: A Tool for Change?
    Roberts, Earllene
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUALITATIVE METHODS, 2012, 11 (05): : 832 - 832
  • [24] Negotiating climate change in public discourse: insights from critical discourse studies
    Wang, Guofeng
    Huan, Changpeng
    [J]. CRITICAL DISCOURSE STUDIES, 2024, 21 (02) : 133 - 145
  • [25] Climate Change in the Movie Weathering with You-Critical Discourse Analysis of Environmental Issues
    Amzah, Normalis
    Ismail, Habibah
    Shi, Ng Lay
    [J]. 3L-LANGUAGE LINGUISTICS LITERATURE-THE SOUTHEAST ASIAN JOURNAL OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE STUDIES, 2023, 29 (03): : 285 - 307
  • [26] Popularity-driven science journalism and climate change: A critical discourse analysis of the unsaid
    Molek-Kozakowska, Katarzyna
    [J]. DISCOURSE CONTEXT & MEDIA, 2018, 21 : 73 - 81
  • [27] A Critical Discourse Analysis on Climate Change in a Globalized World: The Nexus of Islam and Sustainable Development
    Al-Jayyousi, Odeh
    Hasan, Wan Norhaniza Wan
    Saniff, Shereeza Mohamed
    Sever, Seda Duygu
    Tok, Evren
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY, 2023, 15 (19)
  • [28] Tactical Opposition: Obstructing Loss and Damage Finance in the United Nations Climate Negotiations
    Falzon, Danielle
    Shaia, Fred
    Roberts, J. Timmons
    Hossain, Md. Fahad
    Robinson, Stacy-ann
    Khan, Mizan R.
    Ciplet, David
    [J]. GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS, 2023, 23 (03) : 95 - 119
  • [29] The Politics of Climate Change Metaphors in the US Discourse: Conceptual Metaphor Theory and Analysis from an Ecolinguistics and Critical Discourse Analysis Perspective
    Li, Jinyan
    Wu, Shuqiong
    [J]. DISCOURSE & COMMUNICATION, 2024, 18 (04) : 648 - 651
  • [30] The Politics in Climate Change Metaphors in the US Discourse: Conceptual Metaphor Theory and Analysis from an Ecolinguistics and Critical Discourse Analysis Perspective
    Zhong, Xin
    Ren, Xiaoyu
    [J]. JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE AND POLITICS, 2024, 23 (03) : 469 - 472