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47 Nat. Resources J. 195 (2007)
Collective Action on Climate Change: The Logic of Regime Failure

handle is hein.journals/narj47 and id is 203 raw text is: PAUL G. HARRIS*

Collective Action on Climate Change:
The Logic of Regime Failure
ABSTRACT
The international climate regime, primarily designed to limit the
emissions of pollutants causing global warming, has failed. Why has
international cooperation to combat global warming been so
difficult, and what factors must change to improve the situation -
assuming it is even possible? Using Mancur Olson's classical
theory of collective action, this article endeavors to explain the
failure of the climate regime. Other international environmental
agreements and the associated regimes, such as the Mediterranean
Action Plan and the Montreal Protocol on ozone depletion,
demonstrate that collective action to address international environ-
mental problems is possible. Both agreements contain the
ingredients that classical theory suggests are necessary to achieve
collective action. But the flipside of collective action theory- that
collective action in larger groups is very difficult or unlikely- can
also apply to international agreements and action on climate
change. Despite the Mediterranean and Montreal successes,
relatively speaking, and in spite of so much effort over two decades
to create an effective climate regime, it is by no means apparent that
the elements for success will exist for the foreseeable future. We
should expect a continued muddling along that may, at best, reduce
slightly-but not reverse-global warming at some point in the
relatively distant future. Climate change is with us to stay.
It is now patently clear that the world is facing a growing set of
environmental dangers. The greatest among them is probably climate
change -changes to Earth's climate system, manifested in events such as
drought, floods, sea-level rise, major temperature rises in some regions (e.g.,
the Artic) and potentially precipitous falls in others (e.g., Europe), extinction
of species, and spread of pests (to give but a sampling of the myriad
* Paul G. Harris is a professor of international and environmental studies and director
of the Project on Environmental Change and Foreign Policy at Lingnan University, Hong
Kong. His essays on global environmental politics and international ethics have appeared
widely in scholarly journals. He is author or editor of several books, including International
Equity and Global Environmental Politics (Ashgate), Climate Change and American Foreign Policy
(St. Martin's Press), The Environment, International Relations, and U.S. Foreign Policy
(Georgetown University Press), International Environmental Cooperation (University Press of
Colorado), Global Warming and EastAsia (Routledge), Confronting Environmental Change in East
and Southeast Asia (United Nations University Press/ Earthscan), and Europe and Global Climate
Change (Edward Elgar).

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