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Climate change and the challenge to liberalism

Climate change and the challenge to liberalism
Climate change and the challenge to liberalism
In this editorial, we consider the ways in which liberal constitutionalism is challenged by and presents challenges to the climate crisis facing the world. Over recent decades, efforts to mitigate the climate crisis have generated a new set of norms for states and non-state actors, including regulatory norms (emission standards, carbon regulations), organising principles (common but differentiated responsibility) and fundamental norms (climate justice, intergenerational rights, human rights). However, like all norms, these remain contested. Particularly in light of their global reach, their specific behavioural implications and interpretations and the related obligations to act remain debatable and the overwhelming institutionalization of the neoliberal market economy makes clear and effective responses to climate change virtually impossible within liberal societies.

climate change, climate crisis, climatization of global politics, intergenerational rights, liberal constitutionalism, neoliberalism, regulatory norms
2045-3817
1-10
Kang, Susan
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Havercroft, Jonathan
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Eisler, Jacob
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Wiener, Antje
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Shaw, Jo
46dc1d6b-85de-4c36-ba9d-c4335a0b0fa9
Kang, Susan
ee0d0490-66ee-41ef-ba64-61a78a7cf49e
Havercroft, Jonathan
929f9452-daf9-4859-9f59-88348846949a
Eisler, Jacob
a290dee3-c42f-4ede-af9a-5ede55d0135a
Wiener, Antje
b9e5298f-7bc4-4fef-b57a-8fdf90eb111d
Shaw, Jo
46dc1d6b-85de-4c36-ba9d-c4335a0b0fa9

Kang, Susan, Havercroft, Jonathan, Eisler, Jacob, Wiener, Antje and Shaw, Jo (2023) Climate change and the challenge to liberalism. Global Constitutionalism, 12 (1), 1-10. (doi:10.1017/S2045381722000314).

Record type: Review

Abstract

In this editorial, we consider the ways in which liberal constitutionalism is challenged by and presents challenges to the climate crisis facing the world. Over recent decades, efforts to mitigate the climate crisis have generated a new set of norms for states and non-state actors, including regulatory norms (emission standards, carbon regulations), organising principles (common but differentiated responsibility) and fundamental norms (climate justice, intergenerational rights, human rights). However, like all norms, these remain contested. Particularly in light of their global reach, their specific behavioural implications and interpretations and the related obligations to act remain debatable and the overwhelming institutionalization of the neoliberal market economy makes clear and effective responses to climate change virtually impossible within liberal societies.

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Accepted/In Press date: 1 March 2023
Published date: 20 March 2023
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press.
Keywords: climate change, climate crisis, climatization of global politics, intergenerational rights, liberal constitutionalism, neoliberalism, regulatory norms

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 481220
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481220
ISSN: 2045-3817
PURE UUID: 814e2a22-bb2d-488b-bcce-f667e8f33e34
ORCID for Jonathan Havercroft: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0995-8912
ORCID for Jacob Eisler: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4422-5255

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 18 Aug 2023 16:59
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:26

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Contributors

Author: Susan Kang
Author: Jacob Eisler ORCID iD
Author: Antje Wiener
Author: Jo Shaw

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