572
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Research Articles

Transnational city networks, global political economy, and climate governance: C40 in Mexico and Lima

& ORCID Icon
Pages 26-46 | Received 16 Jan 2022, Accepted 23 Dec 2022, Published online: 27 Feb 2023

References

  • Acuto, M. (2013). Global cities, governance and diplomacy: The urban link. Routledge.
  • Acuto, M., & Ghojeh, M. (2019). C40 cities inside out. Global Policy, 10(4), 709–711.
  • Aldecoa, F. (1999). Paradiplomacy in action: The foreign relations of subnational governments. (Vol. 4). Taylor & Francis US.
  • ARUP. (2020, July). Structural optimization of Torre Manacar. https://www.arup.com/projects/torre-manacar
  • Aspen Inst. (2013). CityLab 2013: Urban solutions to global challenges. The Aspen Institute. https://www.aspeninstitute.org/events/citylab-urban-solutions-global-challenges-2/
  • Barandiarán, A., Tantalean, J., & Fajardo, S. D. (2014). Memorias del Foro Nacional Ciudades Sostenibles: Agenda de Gestión Local. Ministerio del Ambiente (MINAM).
  • Betsill, M., & Bulkeley, H. (2004). Transnational networks and global environmental governance: The Cities for Climate Protection program. International Studies Quarterly, 48(2), 471–493.
  • Betsill, M., & Bulkeley, H. (2006). Cities and the multilevel governance of global climate change. Global Governance: A Review of Multilateralism and International Organizations, 12(2), 141–159.
  • Biermann, F., & Kim, R. E. (2020). Architectures of earth system governance: Setting the stage. In Architectures of Earth System Governance (pp. 1–34). Cambridge University Press.
  • Bloomberg, M. (2013). #CityLab: Urban solutions to global challenges. Mike Bloomberg. https://www.mikebloomberg.com/news/citylab-urban-solutions-to-global-challenges/
  • Borgatti, S. P., Everett, M. G., & Freeman, L. C. (2002). Ucinet 6 for Windows: Software for social network analysis (Version 6) [Windows]. Analytic Technologies.
  • Bouteligier, S. (2012). Cities, networks, and global environmental governance: Spaces of innovation, places of leadership. Routledge.
  • Bouteligier, S. (2013). Inequality in new global governance arrangements: The North-South divide in transnational municipal networks. Innovation, 26(3), 251–267.
  • Brown, E., Derudder, B., Parnreiter, C., Pelupessy, W., Taylor, P. J., & Witlox, F. (2010). World city networks and global commodity chains: Towards a world-systems’ integration. Global Networks, 10(1), 12–34.
  • Bryant, G. (2019). Carbon markets in a climate-changing capitalism. Cambridge University Press.
  • Bulkeley, H., Andonova, L., Bäckstrand, K., Betsill, M., Compagnon, D., Duffy, R., Kolk, A., Hoffmann, M., Levy, D., Newell, P., Milledge, T., Paterson, M., Pattberg, P., & VanDeveer, S. (2012). Governing climate change transnationally: Assessing the evidence from a database of sixty initiatives. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy, 30(4), 591–612.
  • Bulkeley, H., & Betsill, M. (2005). Rethinking sustainable cities: Multilevel governance and the ‘urban’ politics of climate change. Environmental Politics, 14(1), 42–63.
  • Bulkeley, H., Broto, V. C., & Edwards, G. A. S. (2014). An urban politics of climate change: Experimentation and the governing of socio-technical transitions. Routledge.
  • Bulkeley, H., & Schroeder, H. (2012). Beyond state/non-state divides: Global cities and the governing of climate change. European Journal of International Relations, 18(4), 743–766.
  • BYD. (2021). About BYD. https://www.byd.com/en/CompanyIntro.html
  • C40. (2012). C40 announces new guidelines for membership categories. https://c40-production-images.s3.amazonaws.com/press_releases/images/25_C40_20Guidelines_20FINAL_2011.14.12.original.pdf?1388095701
  • C40. (2015). C40, 10 years of results. Cities, climate leadership group. http://www.c40.org/blog_posts/year-in-review-c40-celebrates-10-years-of-city-climate-action
  • Carroll, W. K. (2010). The making of a transnational capitalist class: Corporate power in the twenty-first century. Zed.
  • Carroll, W. K., & Sapinski, J. P. (2010). The global corporate elite and the transnational policy-planning network, 1996-2006: A structural analysis. International Sociology, 25(4), 501–538.
  • CFF. (2022, January). C40 cities finance facility. C40 Cities Finance Facility. https://www.c40cff.org
  • Citi Foundation. (2020, July). A commitment to our cities and future. Citi Blog. https://blog.citigroup.com/2017/01/a-commitment-to-our-cities-and-future
  • CityLab. (2013). CityLab 2013. CityLab. https://www.citylab.com
  • ClimateWorks. (2020, July). Projects. https://www.climateworks.org/?s=Mexico
  • Cox, R. W. (1981). Social forces, states and world orders: Beyond international relations theory. Millennium, 10(2), 126–155.
  • Cox, R. W. (1987). Production, power and world order. Columbia University Press.
  • Davidson, K., Coenen, L., Acuto, M., & Gleeson, B. (2019). Reconfiguring urban governance in an age of rising city networks: A research agenda. Urban Studies, 56(16), 3540–3555.
  • Davidson, K., & Gleeson, B. (2015). Interrogating urban climate leadership: Toward a political ecology of the C40 network. Global Environmental Politics, 15(4), 21–38.
  • Fundación AVINA. (2017). Fundación AVINA se consolida como referente latinoamericano en el Fondo Verde del Clima. Fudación AVINA.
  • Fundación Transitemos, EMBARQ Andino, Lima cómo vamos, Swisscontact, Libélula, Luz Ambar, Cruzada vial, UCL, Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería, PUCP, & ARAPER. (2013). Hacia una Ciudad para las Personas 2025. Hoja de Ruta para un transporte y una movilidad sostenibles en Lima y Callao al 2025. Fundación Transitemos.
  • Gill, S. (1993). Gramcsi, historical materialism, and international relations. Cambridge University Press.
  • Gill, S. (2003). Power and resistance in the New World Order (2002nd ed.). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Gordon, D. J. (2016). Lament for a network? Cities and networked climate governance in Canada. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy, 34(3), 529–545.
  • Gordon, D. J. (2018). Global urban climate governance in three and a half parts: Experimentation, coordination, integration (and contestation). Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Climate Change, 9(6), 1–15.
  • Gordon, D. J. (2020). Cities on the world stage: The politics of global urban climate governance. Cambridge University Press.
  • Graz, J.-C. (2022). Grounding the politics of transnational private governance: Introduction to the special section. New Political Economy, 27(2), 177–187.
  • Graz, J.-C., & Nölke, A. (2007). Transnational private governance and its limits. Routledge.
  • Hafteck, P. (2003). An introduction to decentralized cooperation: Definitions, origins and conceptual mapping. Public Administration and Development, 23(4), 333–345.
  • Hale, T. (2020). Transnational actors and transnational governance in global environmental politics. Annual Review of Political Science, 23, 203–220.
  • Hassenteufel, P. (2005). De la comparaison internationale à la comparaison transnationale. Revue Française de Science Politique, 55(1), 113–132.
  • Hochstetler, K. (2020). Political economies of energy transition: Wind and solar power in Brazil and South Africa. Cambridge University Press.
  • Hoffmann, M. J. (2011). Climate governance at the crossroads. Oxford University Press.
  • IMG. (2013). Plan Metropolitano de Desarrollo Urbano 2035. Instituto Metropolitano de Gestión de la Municipalidad Metropolitana de Lima.
  • INEI. (2018, January 18). Instituto Nacional de Estadistica e Informatica. http://m.inei.gob.pe/prensa/noticias/lima-alberga-9-millones-320-mil-habitantes-al-2018-10521/
  • Jordan, A., Huitema, D., van Asselt, H., & Forster, J. (Eds.). (2018). Governing climate change: Polycentricity in action? (1st ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Keohane, R., & Nye, J. S. (1977). Power and interdependence: World politics in transition. Little, Brown.
  • Kern, K., & Bulkeley, H. (2009). Cities, Europeanization and multi‐level governance: Governing climate change through transnational municipal networks*. JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, 47(2), 309–332.
  • Lee, T. (2013). Global cities and transnational climate change networks. MIT Press Journal, 13(1), 108–128.
  • Levy, D. L., & Newell, P. J. (2005). The business of global environmental governance. MIT Press.
  • López, O. (2013, November). Mancera Meets Bloomberg: Mexico City Mayor talks climate change in New York. Latin Times. https://www.latintimes.com/mancera-meets-bloomberg-mexico-city-mayor-talks-climate-change-new-york-132571
  • MINAM. (2015). Estratégia Nacional ante el Cambio Climático. Ministerio del Ambiente (MINAM).
  • Miranda Sara, L., & Baud, I. (2014). Knowledge-building in adaptation management: Concertación processes in transforming Lima water and climate change governance. Environment & Urbanization, 26(2), 505–524.
  • Nastar, M. (2014). The quest to become a world city: Implications for access to water. Cities, 41, 1–9.
  • Newell, P., & Paterson, M. (1998). A climate for business: Global warming, the state and capital. Review of International Political Economy, 5(4), 679–703.
  • Newell, P., & Paterson, M. (2010). Climate capitalism: Global warming and the transformation of the global economy. Cambridge University Press.
  • Oberthür, S., & Stokke, O. S. (2011). Managing institutional complexity: Regime interplay and global environmental change. MIT Press.
  • Papin, M. (2020). Where do novelties come from? A social network analysis of Transnational Municipal Networks in global climate governance. Earth System Governance, 4, 100064.
  • Paterson, M. (2020). Climate change and international political economy: Between collapse and transformation. Review of International Political Economy, 28(2), 1–12.
  • Paterson, M., & P‐Laberge, X. (2018). Political economies of climate change. WIREs Climate Change, 9(2), e506.
  • Pearse, R. (2017). Pricing carbon in Australia: Contestation, the state and market failure. Routledge.
  • Perry, J., & Nölke, A. (2006). The political economy of International Accounting Standards. Review of International Political Economy, 13(4), 559–586.
  • Proética. (2016). Cambio Climático y bosques [No. 1; Gobernanza climática. Programa integridad en la Gobernanza Climática]. Transparency International.
  • Quiroz Benitez, D. E. (2011). La política de cambio climático en la Ciudad de México: Análisis de las estrategias de mitigación y adaptación en el PACCM. Colegio de México.
  • Rice, J. L. (2014). An urban political ecology of climate change governance. Geography Compass, 8(6), 381–394.
  • Risse-Kappen, T. (1995). Bringing transnational relations back in: Non-state actors, domestic structures, and international institutions. Cambridge University Press.
  • Robinson, W. (2008). Latin America and global capitalism: A critical globalization perspective. Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Román, M. (2010). Governing from the middle: The C40 Cities Leadership Group. Corporate Governance, 10(1), 73–84.
  • Sapinski, J. P. (2015). Climate capitalism and the global corporate elite network. Environmental Sociology, 1(4), 268–279.
  • Sapinski, J. P. (2016). Constructing climate capitalism: Corporate power and the global climate policy-planning network. Global Networks, 16(1), 89–111.
  • Scott, J., & Carrington, P. (2014). The SAGE handbook of social network analysis. SAGE Publications Ltd.
  • Seabrooke, L., & Henriksen, L. F. (Eds.). (2017). Professional networks in transnational governance. Cambridge University Press.
  • Shair-Rosenfield, S., Schakel, A. H., Niedzwiecki, S., Marks, G., Hooghe, L., & Chapman-Osterkatz, S. (2021). Language difference and regional authority. Regional & Federal Studies, 31(1), 73–97.
  • Sklair, L. (1997). Social movements for global capitalism: The transnational capitalist class in action. Review of International Political Economy, 4(3), 514–538.
  • Sklair, L. (2000). The transnational capitalist class and the discourse of globalisation. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 14(1), 67–85.
  • Smeds, E. (2019). Unpacking the politics of C40: ‘Critical friendship’ for a second decade. Global Policy, 10(4), 720–722.
  • Stokes, L. C. (2020). Short circuiting policy: Interest groups and the battle over clean energy and climate policy in the American states. Oxford University Press.
  • Strange, S. (1996). The Retreat of the state: The diffusion of power in the world economy. Cambridge University Press.
  • Tanner, T., & Allouche, J. (2011). Towards a new political economy of climate change and development. IDS Bulletin, 42(3), 1–14.
  • Taylor, P. J. (2001). Specification of the world city network. Geographical Analysis, 33(2), 181–194.
  • Taylor, P. J. (2005). New political geographies: Global civil society and global governance through world city networks. Political Geography, 24(6), 703–730.
  • Taylor, P. J. (2011). Historical world city networks. In B. Derudder, M. Hoyler, P. Taylor, & F. Witlox (Eds.), International handbook of globalization and world cities (pp. 9–21). Edward Elgar.
  • van der Pijl, K. (1998). Transnational classes and international relations. Routledge.
  • Ward, M. D., Stovel, K., & Sacks, A. (2011). Network analysis and political science. Annual Review of Political Science, 14, 245–264.
  • Wellman, B. (1983). Network analysis: Some basic principles. Sociological Theory, 1, 155.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.