印度在国际气候变化机制中的外交话语与发展困境

IF 0.5 3区 社会学 Q3 AREA STUDIES India Review Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1080/14736489.2021.1875699
S. Pathak, Christie L. Parris
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在《联合国气候变化框架公约》谈判中,印度一再推动国际社会采取紧急行动应对气候变化,同时又拒绝限制本国的排放量,令其他参与国感到沮丧。现有的以经济和战略利益为基础的解释不足以解释印度国际气候政策中的一些关键异常现象,并将印度外交话语中的这些矛盾视为现实政治或务实外交。我们认为,为了促进印度有意义地参与国际气候变化机制,我们需要处理这些矛盾,并理解印度对道德和物质领导的渴望,这种渴望源于经济和战略利益与理念因素之间的复杂相互作用。我们认为,印度否定西方物质主义的反殖民话语,以及它在全球政治中成为道德大国的愿望,加上它模仿西方生活水平的愿望,为印度在后殖民时代在全球气候变化制度中的身份创造了一个发展困境。印度不断尝试解决这一困境,在气候变化讨论中产生了特定的框架——将自己描绘成受害者,对西方的不信任,将地球的二氧化碳承载能力描绘成扩大的主权领土,以及国家例外论。这些框架与印度作为一个后殖民国家更广泛的外交政策话语是一致的,并结合了印度对道德领导的要求,寻求发达国家的承诺,尽自己的一份力量,同时在国际气候机制中发挥有限的作用。
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India’s diplomatic discourse and development dilemma in the international climate change regime
ABSTRACT At the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change negoti- ations, India has repeatedly pushed for urgent international action on climate change, while simultaneously refusing to limit its own emissions, frustrating other participating countries. The extant economic and strategic interest-based expla- nations do not sufficiently explain some key anomalies in India’s international climate policy and have justified such contradictions in India’s diplomatic dis- course as realpolitik or pragmatic diplomacy. We argue that in order to facilitate India’s meaningful participation in the international climate change regime, we need to engage with these contradictions and understand India’s aspirations for moral and material leadership that stem from the complex interaction between economic and strategic interests and ideational factors. We posit that India’s anti-colonial discourse that repudiated Western materialism, along with its de- sire to be a moral power in global politics coupled with its desire to mimic the western standard of living, creates a development dilemma for India’s postcolo- nial identity in the global climate change regime. India’s continuous attempt to resolve this dilemma has produced specific frames–projecting itself as a victim, mistrust of the West, framing the Earth’s CO2 carrying capacity as extended sovereign territory, and national exceptionalism–in the climate change discourse. These frames are consistent with India’s broader foreign policy discourse as a postcolonial nation and have coalesced India’s claim to moral leadership, seek commitments from developed countries to do their part, and simultaneously play- ing a limited role in the international climate regime.
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来源期刊
India Review
India Review AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.30
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0.00%
发文量
8
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