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The polycentricity of climate policy blockage

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Abstract

This paper builds on recent research on polycentric governance and the Ecology of Games to understand climate politics in the USA. Complementing previous work from 2005 to 2009, we map out the ideological networks of political actors engaged in the climate policy network using data from the US Congress as an arena of symbolic interaction. Our analysis identifies polycentric sites of ideological congruence and conflict in the discourse network on climate change. Political actors from different levels and including several actor types formed multiple centers that became bipolarized between the 112th and 114th sessions of the US Congress. This process took place in tandem with the increased participation of subnational actors in the polycentric system. By the 114th session of the Congress—during which the 2016 election took place—subnational policy actors, along with a diversity of other actors, contributed to an extremely polarized discussion of one of the central policies in the Obama Administration’s Climate Action Plan: the Clean Power Plan. This finding is remarkable as the concept of polycentricity tends to be normatively associated with policy innovation, rather than stagnation. Our longitudinal analysis demonstrates, using Discourse Network Analysis, how increased multi-level participation can be associated with policy blockage of progressive climate policies rather than enabling policy innovation.

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Notes

  1. https://www.govinfo.gov/help/chrg (Accessed 9 May 2019)

  2. The Clean Power Plan was first proposed by the Obama Administration in June 2014. For details, see https://19january2017snapshot.epa.gov/cleanpowerplan/clean-power-plan-existing-power-plants_.html#rule-history(accessed 8 May 2019).

  3. For details, see https://www.eenews.net/interactive/clean_power_plan (Accessed 8 May 2019).

  4. Details available at: http://www.eenews.net/interactive/clean_power_plan/fact_sheets/legal (accessed 27 January 2018).

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Correspondence to Dana R. Fisher.

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Fisher, D.R., Leifeld, P. The polycentricity of climate policy blockage. Climatic Change 155, 469–487 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-019-02481-y

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