In Quest of a Shared Planet

Negotiating Climate from the Global South

Naveeda Khan

Pages: 240

Fordham University Press
Fordham University Press

This book can be opened with

Glassboxx eBooks and audiobooks can be opened on phones, tablets, iOS and Android devices

Paperback / softback
ISBN: 9781531502782
Published: 16 May 2023
$24.95
Hardback
ISBN: 9781531502775
Published: 16 May 2023
$90.00
Open Access
eBook (ePub)
ISBN: 9781531502799
Published: 16 May 2023
$0.00
Open Access

Note on our eBooks: you can read our eBooks (ePUB or PDF) on the free Fordham Books app on iOS, Android, and desktop. To purchase a digital book you will need to create an account if you don’t already have one. After purchasing you will receive instructions on how to get started.

Based on the author’s eight years of fieldwork with the United Nations-led Conference of Parties (COP), In Quest of a Shared Planet offers an illuminating first-person ethnographic perspective on climate change negotiations. Focusing on the Paris Agreement, anthropologist Naveeda Khan introduces readers to the only existing global approach to the problem of climate change, one that took nearly thirty years to be collectively agreed upon. She shares her detailed descriptions of COP21 to COP25 and growing understanding of the intricacies of the climate negotiation process, leading her to ask why countries of the Global South invested in this slow-moving process and to explore how they have maneuvered it.

With a focus on the Bangladeshi delegation at the COPs, Khan draws out what it means to be a small, poor, and dependent country within the negotiation process. Her interviews with negotiators within country delegations uncover their pathways to the negotiating tables. Through observations of training sessions of negotiators of the Global South, Khan seeks to reveal understandings of what is or is not achievable within negotiated texts and the power of deal-making and deferrals. She profiles individuals who had committed themselves to the climate negotiation process, moving between the Secretariat, Parties, activists, and the wider UN system to bring their principles, strategies, emotions, and visions into view. She explores how the newest pillar of climate action, loss and damage, emerged historically and how developed countries attempted to control it in the process. Khan suggests that we understand the Global South’s pursuit of loss and damage not only as a politics of forcing the issue of a conjoined future upon the Global North, but as a gift to the youth of the world to secure that future.

With this book Khan hopes to rekindle an older way of doing politics through the tenets of diplomacy upheld by the UN that have been overshadowed of late by the politics of confrontation. She stresses that while the tension between efforts of equity and solidarity and global economic competition, which have run through the negotiation process, might undercut the urgency to carry out climate mitigation, it needs to be addressed for meaningful and sustainable climate action.

Deeply insightful and highly readable, In Quest of a Shared Planet is a stirring call to action that highlights the key role responsive and active youth have in climate negotiations. It is an invitation not only to understand the climate negotiation process, but also to navigate it (for those planning to attend sessions themselves) and to critique it—with, the author hopes, sympathy and an eye to viable alternatives.

In Quest of a Shared Planet: Negotiating Climate from the Global South is available from the publisher on an open-access basis.

If there's one country on earth that has the most at stake in slowing climate change, it might be Bangladesh. So it makes great sense to hear the story of the global climate negotiations from this perspective—it will be of interest to anyone who has followed these talks, or who wants to understand how the world looks different depending on where on it you were born.---Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature

With vivid ethnography we are transported to the central hub of climate politics and invited to share in the aspirations of youth activists and the enduring labors of COP negotiators and to view the climate crisis from the perspective of the Global South. Analytically sophisticated, with stories that bring us to the heart of the conversations shaping our socioenvironmental futures, In Quest of a Shared Planet is precisely the kind of dialog we need to be having now.---Cymene Howe, Rice University

Khan shows us the game of global climate negotiations, in which the world’s nations play for the immensely high stakes of reshaping economies to avoid existential disaster. From her close-in position as an embedded ethnographer, she articulates the brilliant strategies by which one small poor country, Bangladesh, succeeded in advancing the needs of the world’s most vulnerable people.---Ben Orlove, Columbia University

An outstanding book, by an excellent scholar writing in a popular voice. The book is a crucial resource for those seeking to understand the COP process, particularly those who are planning to attend as delegates.---Jessica O’Reilly, Indiana University

In Quest of a Shared Planet is a highly original account of the climate negotiation process, written in a refreshingly personal style. Khan’s book works through the difficult issues at the center of why humanity has not successfully dealt with climate change through UN-led negotiations. Khan hammers home the importance for developing countries of issues like payments for damages they’ll experience from climate change they didn’t cause.---J. Timmons Roberts, Brown University

This is a fascinating and unique book. So much has been written about the success and failures of the international climate negotiations by political scientists and by Northern analysts. Khan comes at the question entirely differently. As an anthropologist, she follows Bangladeshi diplomats, analysts, academics and activists to understand what draws and keeps people within the tortuous negotiating process. Her answer will surprise you.---Mike Hulme, University of Cambridge

This volume is a unique offering among current books on climate change. . . Highly recommended.---Choice Reviews

Naveeda Khan is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Johns Hopkins University. She sits on the board of the JHU Center for Islamic Studies, and serves as affiliate faculty for the JHU Undergraduate Program in Environmental Science and Studies. She is the author of Muslim Becoming: Aspiration and Skepticism in Pakistan (Duke, 2012) and River Life and the Upspring of Nature (Duke, 2023) and editor of Beyond Crisis: Re-evaluating Pakistan (Routledge, 2010).

Twitter

List of Acronyms and Abbreviations | ix

Bodies under the UNFCCC | xiii

Introduction: The Climate Regime | 1

1 How to COP | 11

2 The Voice of Bangladesh | 38

3 Who Wants to Be a Negotiator? | 59

4 Politics in Between-Spaces | 78

5 Accounting for Change in the Paris Agreement | 104

6 A Thrice-Told Tale of Negotiations | 123

7 The House of Loss and Damage | 154

Conclusion: The Gift of the Global South | 173

Acknowledgments | 181

Notes | 185

Bibliography | 195

Index | 219

Please click the link below to download the Open Access version of this book.