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Collaborative Ethnography of Global Environmental Governance
Concepts, Methods and Practices
This Element introduces global event ethnography as a methodology designed to navigate complexity and analyse social and political dynamics.
Stefan C. Aykut (Author), Simone Rödder (Author), Max Braun (Author)
9781009476041, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 13 June 2024
88 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 1 cm, 0.28 kg
Environmental mega conferences have become the format of choice in environmental governance. Conferences of the Parties (COPs) under the climate change and biodiversity conventions in particular attract global media attention and an ever-growing number of increasingly diverse actors, including scholars of global environmental politics. They are arenas for interstate negotiation, but also temporary interfaces that constitute and represent world society, and they focalise global struggles over just and sustainable futures. Collaborative event ethnography (CEE) as a research methodology emerged as a response to these developments. This volume retraces its genealogy, explains its conceptual and methodological foundations and presents insights into its practice. It is meant as an introduction for students, an overview for curious newcomers to the field, and an invitation for experienced researchers wishing to experiment with a new method. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
1. Introduction
2. Ethnography meets global environmental governance: history and theory
3. Common conceptual problems
4. Methodological building blocks
5. Practicing collective research
6. Applying collaborative event ethnography
7. Concluding remarks
References.
Subject Areas: International environmental law [LBBP]
