AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


China's involvement in international environmental protection

Author

Term

4. term

Publication year

2013

Pages

64

Abstract

This thesis examines how and why China engages in international environmental protection. Against the backdrop of environmental spillovers and China’s large population, status as the top CO2 emitter, rising energy demand, and severe ecological stress, the study argues that China’s choices have global implications. It integrates identity theory (from a constructivist perspective), Putnam’s logic of two-level games, and an interest-based analysis focused on four drivers: environmental vulnerability, political concerns, economic costs, and national image. Drawing on reliable empirical data and a case study of China’s positions and actions in international climate negotiations, it shows how decision-makers reconcile international obligations with domestic priorities. The findings suggest a shift from more passive to more active participation: China’s identities as a socialist and developing country constrain full engagement, while the desire to be seen as a responsible great power pushes toward greater involvement. In climate diplomacy, a relatively centralized decision-making model, symbolic ratification procedures, and negotiation strategies matter despite internal divergences of interest. Political stability and autonomy, along with economic development, generally take precedence over environmental protection, reinforcing a focus on short-term gains. The thesis thus situates China’s international environmental efforts within a framework that explains both motivations and constraints.

Denne afhandling undersøger, hvordan og hvorfor Kina engagerer sig i international miljøbeskyttelse. Med udgangspunkt i den grænseoverskridende karakter af miljøproblemer og Kinas store befolkning, status som den største CO2‑udleder, voksende energibehov og alvorlige miljøbelastning argumenteres der for, at Kinas valg får global betydning. Undersøgelsen kombinerer identitetsteori (i en konstruktivistisk optik), Putnams logik om to‑niveaus‑spil og en interessebaseret analyse af fire drivkræfter: miljømæssig sårbarhed, politiske hensyn, økonomiske omkostninger og nationalt image. Baseret på pålidelige empiriske data og en casestudie af Kinas positioner og handlinger i internationale klimaforhandlinger belyses, hvordan beslutningstagere balancerer internationale forpligtelser med indenlandske prioriteter. Resultaterne peger på, at Kinas deltagelse bevæger sig fra en mere passiv mod en mere aktiv rolle: Identiteterne som socialistisk og udviklingsland begrænser en fuld involvering, mens ønsket om at fremstå som et ansvarligt stormagt presser i retning af større engagement. I klimaforhandlinger spiller et relativt centraliseret beslutningssystem, symbolske ratifikationsprocedurer og forhandlingstaktikker en vigtig rolle på trods af interne interesseforskelle. Politisk stabilitet og autonomi samt økonomisk udvikling prioriteres generelt over miljøhensyn, hvilket bidrager til fokus på gevinster på kort sigt. Afhandlingen sætter derved Kinas internationale miljøindsats ind i en ramme, der forklarer både drivkræfter og begrænsninger.

[This apstract has been generated with the help of AI directly from the project full text]