Historical materialist policy analysis and climate change policies

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Abstract

The authors discuss the potential of historical-materialist policy analysis (HMPA) to understand the politics and policies of climate change mitigation. The core aim of HMPA is to analyse how specific policies are formulated against the background of competing and contradictory interests of different social forces and how, if at all, they contribute to social reproduction and the regulation of contradictory social relations and crisis tendencies. To operationalize HMPA for empirical research, the authors propose a three-step process: (1) context analysis, (2) actor analysis, and (3) process analysis. Focussing on Negative Emission Technologies (NETs) in particular, they argue that the integration of NETs into EU climate policy is not just a result of ‘rational’ decision-making or the efficacy of sociotechnical imaginaries. Rather, it is shaped by material interests of actors and their respective strategies. Specifically, HMPA permits to analyse why and how fossil capital and other capital fractions seek to normalise NETs to reduce stranded assets and to ease the political pressure to cut emissions across different economic sectors. They conclude that HMPA sensitises us for the inherent contestedness of such policy-making processes, thereby drawing attention to alternative political initiatives to counteract the potential of NETs to delay climate change mitigation.
Original languageGerman
Title of host publicationHandbook on Critical Political Economy and Public Policy
EditorsChristoph Scherrer, Ana Garcia, Joscha Wullweber
PublisherEdward Elgar
Chapter8
Pages110-126
ISBN (Electronic)9781800373785
ISBN (Print)9781800373778, Cheltenham
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Publication series

SeriesHandbooks of Research on Public Policy series

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 506010 Policy analysis
  • 506007 International relations

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