Lunch & Launch: "Climate Politics: Can't Live With it, Can't Mitigate Without it"

9 March 2026, 12:30–13:30
Brussels School of Governance, Lisbon & Rome room (-1)
Event type
Lecture

"Climate Politics: Can't Live With it, Can't Mitigate Without it"

The Brussels School of Governance and its Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence 'ReThinkEU' are pleased to announce the launch of Prof. Dr Caroline Kuzemko's book: Climate Politics: Can't live with it, can't mitigate without it, published by Cambridge University Press. This will take place on 9 March at 12:30 in our conference room "Lisbon/Rome".

Register here

About the book

The book argues that the politics of climate mitigation, and its relationship to policy and society, are poorly understood and that this really matters - particularly in times of growing opposition. All scenarios of 1.5 or 2°C compliant futures view policy as the driver of change, but many researchers and policymakers also view politics as standing in the way of change – as if the two are somehow separable. Partly as a corrective, this book offers a novel, inclusive, and broad conceptualisation of climate mitigation politics, which combines insights on politics by Colin Hay (2007) with more climate mitigation focused insights from international political economy, public policy and socio-technical transitions. It presents mitigation politics, policy, and policymaking as dynamically inter-related and foregrounds the importance of capacity, social interaction, and deliberation features of politics.

This conceptualisation frames the subsequent historicised, multi-scalar analysis of four interrelated 'phases' of climate mitigation politics. The analysis starts in the 1970s, when climate mitigation was not a political issue, and explores phases in its construction as an area of public policy – largely at global and national scales. There is some emphasis on constructing mitigation policy in energy sectors in high and middle-income countries, engaging with the struggles, injustices, and decisions involved in creating low GHG emissions alternatives and phasing out fossil fuels. 

Conceptualising politics in broad and more inclusive terms directly informs an overriding argument that climate mitigation has become politicised over the decades in a variety of ways and that that is no bad thing. Indeed, taking too narrow an approach to understanding politics runs the risk of underestimating the societal outcomes of mitigation policy and missing opportunities for deliberation and policy improvement. Drawing narrow boundaries around politics, then, places the political project of mitigation at further risk. The chapters present examples at global, national, and local scales, spanning from the 1990s to the 2020s. 

The book:

  • draws on multiple disciplines to formulate more socially inclusive and politically acceptable understandings of climate change mitigation politics
  • provides guidance on how to design policy that is more politically viable and socially engaged at a time of climate urgency and greater contestation
  • includes insights into different political and material phases of climate mitigation, how they relate to one another, and how policy choices, policy outcomes and politics reshape each other over time

This volume will prove valuable for graduate students, researchers, and policymakers interested in the politics and policy of climate change. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

Programme

12h30: Welcome and brief introduction of the speaker, Caroline Kuzemko

12h35: Book presentation

13h15: Q&A

A light lunch will be foreseen.

Caroline Kuzemko

She is a Professor of the Political Economy of Climate Change at the University of Warwick and a Co-Director of the UK Energy Research Centre. Her work explores the roles of politics and policy in enabling, constraining, and shaping low-emissions energy transformations. Her publications include books on Climate Politics: Can’t Live with It, Can’t Mitigate without It; The Energy Security-Climate Nexus: Institutional Change in the UK and Beyond; and a special section on ‘New Directions in the IPE of Energy’, in Review of International Political Economy. She previously worked as a Director at UBS, London.

Register here

 

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