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SEEN BUT OVERLOOKED? THE EMERGENCE OF REGIONAL LEADERSHIP IN
POLYCENTRIC CLIMATE GOVERNANCE AFTER PARIS
ANA RAQUEL ALMEIDA DIAS
id9204@uminho.pt
PhD candidate in Political Science and International Relations at the University of Minho
(Portugal). She also holds a master's degree in Political Science and a bachelor's degree in
International Relations, both from the University of Minho. Currently, her research project
focuses on analysing the dynamics of global climate governance with a particular focus on
regional federal actors. Collaborator at Research Center CICP, University of Minho. ORCID: 0000-
0002-5504-5930
SANDRINA ANTUNES
santunes@eeg.uminho.pt
Doutorada em Ciência Política pela Universidade Libre de Brexelas, scientific fellow desde 2013.
Mestre em Antropologia Política e licenciada em Relações Internacionais pela Universidade do
Minho. Colaborou com o Committee of the Regions e com a Assembleia das Regiões Europeias.
Os interesses de investigação encontram-se na intersecção da Ciência Política e dos Estudos
Europeus. Member of the Research Center CICP, University of Minho, Braga (Portugal). ORCID:
0000-0002-7009-9208
Abstract
As the Paris Agreement formalized a climate regime transition towards a more polycentric
approach, non-state agents have been perceived as influential actors in global climate
governance. Observing the implementation of climate targets by regional governments in
federal or decentralized systems, the dynamics of climate leadership are also being defined
by these actors. While recent literature recognized the emergence of such dynamics in
increasingly polycentric structures, the consideration of regional action in the domain of
climate leadership demonstrates a shortage of conceptual and empirical studies. Reviewing
the existent references on polycentric governance, but also climate leadership, this paper is
guided by two goals: (i) to problematize and acknowledge the literature gap on the
phenomenon of regional leadership in global climate governance; and (ii) justify the relevance
and need of developing such study.
Keywords
Paris Agreement, Polycentric Governance, Regional Climate Leadership.
Resumo
O Acordo de Paris formalizou uma transição do regime climático para uma abordagem mais
policêntrica que reconhece os agentes não estatais como atores influentes na governação
climática global. Tendo em conta a implementação de metas climáticas por governos regionais
em sistemas federais ou descentralizados, as dinâmicas da liderança climática também estão
a ser definidas por estes atores. Embora a literatura reconheça o surgimento de dinâmicas de
liderança alternativas em estruturas cada vez mais policêntricas, poucos estudos analisam a
ação regional no domínio do clima quer através de estudos conceptuais ou empíricos. Revendo
as referências existentes sobre governação policêntrica, mas também sobre liderança
climática, este artigo é guiado por dois objetivos: (i) problematizar e reconhecer a lacuna na
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
Vol. 14, Nº. 2 (November 2023-April 2024), pp. 341-357
Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
342
literatura sobre o fenómeno da liderança regional na governão climática global; e (ii)
justificar a relevância e necessidade do desenvolvimento deste mesmo estudo.
Palavras chave
Acordo de Paris; Governação Policêntrica; Liderança Climática Regional
How to cite this article
Dias, Ana Raquel Almeida; Antunes, Sandrina (2023). Seen but overlooked? The Emergence of
Regional Leadership in Polycentric Climate Governance after Paris. Janus.net, e-journal of
international relations, Vol14 N2, November 2023-April 2024. Consulted [online] in date of last
view, https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.14.2.16
Article received on May 31, 2023 and accepted on September 4, 2023
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
Vol. 14, Nº. 2 (November 2023-April 2024), pp. 341-357
Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
343
SEEN BUT OVERLOOKED? THE EMERGENCE OF REGIONAL
LEADERSHIP IN POLYCENTRIC CLIMATE GOVERNANCE
AFTER PARIS
ANA RAQUEL ALMEIDA DIAS
SANDRINA ANTUNES
Introduction
Global climate governance is currently a fast-changing domain denoting dispersed and
multilevel patterns of initiatives by a wide range of actors (Jordan et al., 2015). Described
by Ostrom (2010) as the emergence of a polycentric environment, recent developments
within the international climate regime (Falkner et al., 2010; Hickman, 2015; Jordan et
al., 2018) confirm the trends of greater polycentricity by acknowledging the role of non-
state actors, namely regional governments. Although recent literature in the field
acknowledges such premise (Bulkeley, 2014; Liefferink and Wurzel, 2017; Jordan et al.,
2018), little research has addressed the role of regional climate leadership in a
polycentric context.
According to the 2022 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), there is an
urgency for climate action to take place at multiple governmental levels and calls for
efforts far beyond current international, supranational, national, and sub-national
commitments. Considering the failure of monocentric (i.e., action by the state as a
unitary power) solutions up to the Kyoto Protocol, the Paris Agreement has acknowledged
the need for a more polycentric (i.e., state and non-state action in a multilevel context)
climate regime. It has done so by encouraging climate efforts of non-state actors or, in
other words, Paris has recognized the agency of independent units beyond the state
(supranational, regional, local, public, and private) in the effective long-term response
to climate change (Hale, 2016). In this framework, and observing the increased activity
of climate agency by regional governments in federal contexts towards the
implementation of climate goals, we notice the emergence of regional climate leadership
in polycentric governance. In other words, a functional need has opened an opportunity
for regional actors within federal political systems, to position themselves as agents who
influence the course of global climate governance, thus acting beyond the state.
In what the literature is concerned, there has been a general acknowledgment of non-
state actors as important entities in the governance of climate change, while noting a
contextual opportunity for these to perform climate leadership beyond the state (Jordan
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Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
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et al., 2015; Jordan et al., 2018; Dorsch and Flachsland, 2017; Liefferink and Wurzel,
2017; Wurzel et al., 2019). Being recent and still evolving domains, research on
polycentric climate governance (Jordan et al., 2018) and general climate leadership
(Liefferink and Wurzel, 2017) literature have been dedicated to the development of
theoretical and conceptual knowledge while empirical observations have briefly
considered the role of local governments (i.e., the lower level of administration within a
given state such as municipalities or cities.) as well as private entities (i..e., individuals
or collectivities who are not state-controlled or affiliated such as civil society, NGOs, and
companies). Although contributions in describing and explaining the structural intricacies
of an emerging climate governance reality have been significant, this paper
acknowledges that the current state of the art is still lacking a conceptual framework that
effectively captures regional climate leadership in both theoretical and empirical terms.
In sum, this paper is guided by two objectives: first, the identification of a literature gap
concerning regional climate action and, more specifically the phenomenon of regional
climate leadership; second, justify the relevance of proceeding with such study
concerning both conceptual and empirical analysis. The remainder of this article is divided
into four different parts: to start with, we contextualize and locate a favorable context
for the emergence of regional climate leadership; in second place, a literature review on
climate leadership within polycentric governance is presented to identify a gap; in second
place, we demonstrate the importance of considering the role of regional actors in climate
leadership within a polycentric context while also presenting its conceptual framing; in
the following section we briefly analyze empirical evidence from Québec and California
on the emergence of the phenomenon; finally, we close the article with a summary of
our major arguments and point future research paths.
1. The climate regime: An opportunity for leadership beyond the state
As noticed in the literature (Stripple and Stephan, 2013; Bulkeley et al., 2014; Jacobs,
2019), shifts are taking place in the governance of climate affairs as part of broader
changes in the international system. Within this context, the Paris Agreement is deemed
to have formalized important developments in the climate regime when considering its
institutionalization of governance beyond the state (Jordan et al., 2015; Dorsch and
Flachsland, 2017; Pattberg and Widerberg, 2017; Jordan et al., 2018).
Established in 1992, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC), sets the global framework that deals with the global climate system and,
particularly, with the mitigation of global climate change. In other words, the UNFCCC
represents the international climate regime which, in Krasner’s (1982: 185) words,
consists of principles, norms, rules, and decision-making procedures around which actor
expectations converge in the domain of climate. While the UNFCCC sets the broad
principles and norms of the climate regime, specifications on its rules and procedures
have been defined in its foundational agreements: the Kyoto Protocol (1997), and
second, the Paris Agreement (2015) which, emerged to replace the guidelines previously
established in the 1990s. As Paris abandoned Kyoto's monocentric approach (i.e., action
controlled by a single unitary power (Aligica and Tarko, 2012: 244), the rules and
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
Vol. 14, Nº. 2 (November 2023-April 2024), pp. 341-357
Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
345
procedures of climate governance have adopted polycentric guidelines (i.e., multilevel
patterns of governing (Ostrom, 2010a) therefore, unfolding a paradigm transition in
climate politics (Jordan et al., 2018: 135).
Paris Agreement, article 7th, (2015) acknowledges the broadening universe of
international affairs as complex and fragmented by noting that climate change is a global
challenge faced by all with local, subnational, national, regional, and international
dimensions and that it is a key component of and makes a contribution to the long-term
global response to climate change (United Nations, 2015: 9). Essentially, Paris formalizes
a transition from a regulatory, state-centered approach to a more fragmented
environment (Hale, 2016: 12), or, in other words, a shift from a monocentric to a
polycentric governance approach (Jordan et al., 2018) in terms of regime rules and
decision-making procedures.
The central condition of polycentricity notes that political authority is dispersed among
separate units in a fragmented governance context with overlapping jurisdictions, but
which do not stand in a hierarchical relationship to each other (Skelcher, 2005: 89). In
such environment where several entities have their independent agency recognized
(Ostrom, 2010a: 552), we first hold that polycentricity offers a considerable opportunity
for the involved units to be influential actors in climate governance (Wurzel et al., 2019).
Second, besides opening an opportunity for an independent agency of entities,
polycentric governance also generates dynamics that amplify the action and impact of
the relatively autonomous units who wish to perform self-governance in this context: as
units maintain relations among themselves (Jordan et al., 2018: 147), they take each
other into account in competitive relationships, enter into various contractual and
cooperative undertakings or have recourse to central mechanisms to resolve conflicts
(Ostrom et al., 1961: 831); they build a polycentric system that enhances innovation,
learning, adaptation, trustworthiness, levels of cooperation of participants, and the
achievement of more effective, equitable, and sustainable outcomes at multiple scales
(Ostrom, 2010: 552).
In this context of paradigm transition in the climate regime, we apprehend that regional
governments may take advantage of an opportunity to become more autonomous in the
implementation of global climate targets beyond the nation-state by performing climate
leadership. This paper considers the noticeable role of regional governments in this
transformational process toward polycentric governance in the climate arena (Bulkeley
et al., 2014: 55).
2. Leadership in polycentric climate governance: a literature review
Acknowledging the literature calls to understand an emerging reality in the domain of
climate change as part of broader shifts in global politics (Hoffmann, 2011 and 2013;
Bulkeley et al., 2013; Falkner, 2016), our research relies on the existing literature of
polycentricity and climate leadership to identify and understand a new phenomenon
entitled regional climate leadership.
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Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
346
As the arena of climate change started reflecting larger trends in global politics (Hale and
Held, 2011), subnational governments (regional and local), non-governmental
organizations, business, individual, and non-state actors, in general, are recognized to
be taking responsibility and adopting new approaches in the governance of climate
change (Bulkeley et al., 2014). Considering this fact, the literature has also reflected a
shift from state-centered classical approaches (Barret, 2005; Hare et al., 2010) towards
an academic debate that considers new forms of climate governance by looking at vertical
and horizontal dynamics through which is taking place (Dorsch and Flachsland, 2017).
With the intent of bridging a wide set of proliferating concepts to describe an emerging
reality of complex dynamics (regime complex, fragmented governance, transnational
climate governance), Elinor Ostrom (2010) dedicated her last work to climate change
and suggested the rescue of the term polycentricity
1
as an analytical approach to
understand an emerging structure of climate governance and what efforts can be
improved to face this threat (Dorsch and Flachsland, 2017: 47).
Given that there was potential to generate co-benefits through climate actions occurring
at multiple scales (Ostrom, 2010b; Ostrom 2012), Ostrom notices the emergence of
spontaneous, dispersed, and multilevel governing dynamics from bottom-up sources,
below and alongside the UNFCCC. In her work, Ostrom (2010) described polycentric
systems as multiple governing authorities at different scales (…) each unit exercises
considerable independence to make norms and rules within a specific domain (Ostrom,
2010: 552). Ostrom’s conception of polycentric systems, reveals a broader framework
by precisely considering the relationship between the various levels, units, and domains
(Jordan et al., 2018: 5) that do not necessarily replace each other. Considering Paris'
encouragement of new forms of governing such as annual events and technical expert
meetings, enrollment of non-state and subnational actors in emission commitments, and
then the introduction of the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) by states, the
UNFCCC is being observed by recent scholarship as increasingly reflecting polycentric
governance. Interestingly, Liefferink and Wurzel (2017) notice that polycentric conditions
offer great potential for climate leadership opportunities to a large universe of actors. In
addition, Wurzel et al. (2019) and Wurzel et al. (2021) also note the relevance of MLG
and polycentric framework lenses to understand how different actors employ leadership
and for what purposes.
In the specific domain of climate leadership in polycentric contexts, the work of Liefferink
and Wurzel (2017) and Wurzel et al. (2019) made significant contributions: (1)
clarification of concepts (leaders, pioneers, laggards, and followers); (2) delimitating and
reorganizing a set of analytical distinctions (positioning of leaders and pioneers according
to their internal and external environmental ambitions). Liefferink and Wurzel (2017)
suggest a two-level matrix to qualify states’ environmental policies and therefore, identify
leadership (Table 1). They distinguish actors according to their internal ‘face’ the
environmental ambitions of domestic policies and their external ‘face’ the
1
Having been mentioned in 1961 by Vincent Ostrom in the context of metropolitan governance, he used the
term 'polycentric systems' to identify a system of public services (or goods) that may be provided by
different agencies that are self-organized by a variety of actors in urban American environments (Jordan et
al., 2018: 4).
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Vol. 14, Nº. 2 (November 2023-April 2024), pp. 341-357
Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
347
environmental ambitions displayed in their foreign policy: (a) Laggards have low internal
and external policy intentions; (b) pioneers are ahead of the pack (first-movers)
regarding their domestic policies, but do not have a direct intention to influence followers
in international dimension although they do it unintentionally by setting an example; (c)
symbolic leaders are demonstrative in the international sphere, but are not consequential
in their domestic policies; (d) pushers take the lead domestically by setting the highest
climate standards regardless of any conditioners, and intentionally lobby other actors to
follow their example. Within this frame of reference, the phenomenon of climate
leadership includes the behavior of pushers and pioneers, actors who are either first
movers or who set the highest policy ambitions while influencing the course of climate
governance internally and externally in an indirect (pioneers) or direct way (pushers).
Table 1. Ambitions and Positions of Environmental Actors
Internal ‘face’
External ‘face’
Low internal environmental
ambitions
High internal
environmental ambitions
Low external
environmental ambitions
(a) Laggard
(b) Pioneer
High external
environmental ambitions
(c) Symbolic leader
(d) Pusher
Source: Lieferink and Wurzel, 2017.
The grounding framework of climate leadership conceived by Liefferink and Wurzel
(2017) is an important starting point for looking at the internal and external angles of
the phenomenon. However, when considering its application to regional leadership in
climate governance, we acknowledge that its conception in terms of internal and external
ambitions (i.e., followers’ attraction or not) still leaves much to be said on how these
specific actors express their climate leadership. Briefly, an important political dimension
is missing concerning how regional federal actors take advantage of Paris to fulfill climate
leadership.
Despite the importance of recent literature developments, both in the domain of
polycentric governance and climate leadership, little research has been dedicated to a
deeper conceptual development of climate leadership under polycentric conditions and,
in what concerns the role of regional governments, particularly within federal systems,
no study has been pursued. As such, our contribution is to acknowledge the literature
gap while noticing the relevance of studying an emerging phenomenon that has not been
contemplated yet.
3. Regional climate leadership as politics of self-governance
3.1. Regional climate leadership as the ‘capacity’ to lead
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Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
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Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
348
As polycentricity explains how a regime shift slowly takes place, it also acknowledges
that a considerable number of entities in the international system are exposed to the
opportunity to influence a specific issue field like climate change (Jordan et al., 2018:
136). As the role of federal regions has not been studied through such a prism, nor
applied, more specifically, by the framework of climate leadership, the subtle emergence
of a phenomenon has been seen but overlooked by these fields: regional climate
leadership.
To begin with, the regional level of analysis is of considerable importance for the
successful implementation of climate targets. The term region’ refers to the territorial
unit immediately below the sovereign state (Kuznetsov, 2015: 22), more precisely,
entities situated between the local and national levels with a capacity for authoritative
decision-making (Hooghe et al., 2010: 4). Although climate goals and ambitions are
defined and discussed at the international level, their implementation falls within the
scope of action of each state and, within each state, of their respective subnational
entities. To this end, the specific level of governance that has a central role to play in
climate change policies is regional, particularly federated regions where there is the
autonomy of action in a set of legislative/administrative powers of climate-related
selected sectors/policies. Their closer proximity to citizens, their greater flexibility than
national governments, and the fact that they are responsible for many of the policy areas
involved in climate policies (energy, transport, industry, housing, environment) explain
the importance of regional governments in the implementation of climate policy
(Cittadino et al. 2022). For example, the regional governments of California and Quebec
have been highly active during the last decades in evidencing their potential for
coordinated efforts at all levels of governance by developing their climate policies while,
many times, acting at the forefront of national policy targets (Chaloux, 2016; Leffel,
2018; Chaloux et al. 2022).
According to Galarraga et al. (2011), there are important reasons to consider regional
governments as vital actors for the effective implementation of global climate targets. To
start with, regional bodies are often the main implementing level for global agreements
on climate change policies considering their range of responsibilities particularly in
decentralized states where several policy domains such as environmental policy,
transport, and industrial policies, fall under the scope of regional action. In such federal
contexts, many national governments may not guarantee that their commitments are
successfully achieved without considering their regional units. Additionally, regional
governments are close enough to people to better tailor actions to their needs. Regions
should be able to identify priorities and difficulties and thus implement policies more
clearly, while still being strategic enough to establish links between all the different policy
areas that need to be coordinated for climate change policy. Finally, it is also worth noting
that regions are better placed to guarantee the effective implementation of policies. As
the impacts of climate change will vary from place to place, the combination of
institutions and legal and political tools available to public decisionmakers are unique
from region to region, meaning that each region is aware of its proper strategy.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
Vol. 14, Nº. 2 (November 2023-April 2024), pp. 341-357
Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
349
Secondly, climate leadership performed by regions in federal or decentralized
governments is framed beyond climate action per se. In other words, climate leadership
reflects broader debates of structural and system-wide fragmentation taking place at the
global level through contention, competition, and collaboration governance dynamics
(Risse, 1995; Nye, 2019; Kim, 2020). Understanding their relevance in the policy process
of achieving global targets, but also recognizing the space given to non-party
stakeholders in the Paris Agreement (Chaloux, 2022), a set of regional federal
governments have made their case as actors of local implementation but also as actors
of global-reaching influence (Giudicelli, 2022). Interestingly, the polycentric context
brought by Paris opens a two-fold stage for regional federal governments: (1) the
recognition to internally act beyond a mere relay for national efforts, and, therefore,
design and implement their territorial policies aligned with specific contexts and according
to their legislative capacities (Ibidem); (2) but also the recognition of action across
traditional national boundaries by encouraging the external engagement in climate
governance dynamics (Paquin, 2020). As federated regions have relevant competencies,
both at the national and international levels, there is an opportunity to lead through self-
governance. In other words, the performance of self-governance represents (1) the
chance for a federal region to act autonomously in the implementation of its climate
regulation which may surpass (set higher standards/ambitions) or anticipate (fill
regulatory voids) federal climate policies and, (2) the possibility of regional governments
to engage internationally, without the interference of the state government and influence
course of global climate governance.
3.2. Regional Climate Leadership Beyond the State: a Reviewed Typology
The notion of climate leadership as agents of change presented by Liefferink and Wurzel
(2017) is insufficient to describe the above-described context. As dynamics endorsed by
regional actors require a broader framework of analysis, we consider the conception
presented by Andresen and Agrawala (2002) which regards a relation between actors
within a group (leaders and followers) where one or a few individuals may (1) use power
to induce a group to adopt a particular line of policy and, therefore, (2) shape the
collective behavioral patter of the group. In this line of thought, we understand climate
leadership as the capacity of an actor to, unintentionally or intentionally, change climate
behavioral patterns by gathering followers
2
, thus influencing global climate governance
(Andresen and Agrawala, 2022) through external and/or internal action (Liefferink and
Wurzel 2017). To transpose such conception into the realm of regional climate leadership
beyond the state, this work considers the analytical framework of internal and external
action provided by Liefferink and Wurzel (2017) (see Table 1 above).
To start with, we notice the positioning of climate actors according to their internal and
external ambitions: laggard, pioneer, symbolic leader, and pusher. The two-level matrix
provided by Liefferink and Wurzel (2017) allows the identification of the climate
2
Followers are actors who emulate the activities of pioneers/pushers (leaders). Followers emerge in response
to a perceived superiority and legitimacy of leaders that result in the adoption of the same or a substantively
similar approach to a particular climate problem (Wurzel et al., 2019).
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Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
350
leadership expression in two ways: (1) it establishes that climate leadership is performed
in a two-dimension structure of external and/or internal climate policies that influence
global climate governance; (2) it identifies that pioneers and pushers are the ultimate
expressions of leadership dynamics, the only policy strategies capable of influencing
climate governance (setting of an example of behavioral patterns that may be followed).
On the other hand, we also note that regional leadership in climate governance expresses
dynamics of self-governance (i.e., autonomy of action) in climate action.
Considering the internal and external performance of self-governance (i.e., autonomy of
action) in climate policy as low and high, allows us to identify actors with the actual
capacity to change behavioral patterns (i.e., followers attraction) thus influencing global
climate governance as set out below in Table 2.
Table 2. Regional climate leadership
External ‘face’
Low internal climate
self-governance
High internal climate
self-governance
Low external climate
self-governance
(a) Laggard
(b) Pioneer
High external climate
self-governance
(c) Symbolic leader
(d) Pusher
Source: Author’s own based on Lieferink and Wurzel, 2017.
Table 2 distinguishes the following four types of regional climate leadership positions:
(a) Low internal and low external climate self-governance does not reflect climate
leadership. Federal regions do not make use of their legislative capacities to pursue
their own internal climate regulation or external climate engagement to attract
followers. Such actors are classified as laggards and do not influence climate
governance.
(b) High internal and low external self-governance classify a pioneer position. A pioneer
federal region makes internal use of its legislative capacities to pursue its own
internal climate regulation, being even able to anticipate or surpass federal climate
ambitions, yet it shows no direct interest in attracting followers via international
engagement. A pioneer may, nevertheless, express climate leadership considering
that it may attract followers by unintentionally setting an internal exemplary
behavior and, therefore, also influence global climate governance.
(c) Low internal and high external climate self-governance determines a symbolic
leader. Although the federal region may use its legislative capacities through the
external performance of climate diplomacy, the same is not performed internally.
Considering that there is no domestic commitment in terms of setting its own climate
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
Vol. 14, Nº. 2 (November 2023-April 2024), pp. 341-357
Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
351
regulation, symbolic leaders are not perceived as legitimate actors by potential
followers and are, therefore, unable to change behavioral patterns in global climate
governance (influence).
(d) A combination of high internal and high external self-governance turns a federal
region into a pusher. In this case, a federal government uses its legislative
capacities to pursue its own internal climate regulation, by namely being able to
anticipate or surpass federal climate ambitions, but also to actively mobilize
international partners
3
(followers) externally. A pusher reflects a climate leader that
intentionally influences global climate governance.
Altogether, we perceive that pioneers and pushers are the ultimate expressions of
regional climate leadership dynamics. Both pioneers and pushers make use of their
legislative capacities as federal governments to be influent actors (gather followers) in
climate governance, through external and/or internal action (in the latter, either
intentionally or unintentionally): internally, there is the affirmation of its own climate
regulation, which sometimes may be considered to surpass and/or anticipate national
action; externally, there is an unintentional (pioneers) or intentionally (pushers)
attraction of followers that result in influence over the behavioral patterns of other actors
concerning climate change. In this context, regional climate leadership is the capacity of
regional federal governments to gather followers, thus influencing climate global
governance through the internal and external performance of self-governance.
Overall, regional climate leadership establishes a parallel between the polycentric context
inaugurated by Paris and climate leadership. Such resemblance sets a leverage position
for regional federated governments who might foresee an opportunity to influence
climate governance. The adoption of such strategy consists of the capacity to influence
climate governance (i.e., leadership) in two dimensions: (1) domestically, by adopting
its own climate ambitions (2) internationally, by actively enrolling in climate diplomacy
activities that mobilize other actors to pursue the same climate ambitions. Although such
phenomenon has remained overlooked by the literature, empirical evidence suggests that
it is already taking place whereas some federated states have been acting as autonomous
actors within the global climate regime structured around the Paris Agreement (Chaloux
et al., 2022).
4. Evidence of regional climate leadership: the cases of California and
Québec
Although subnational governments have been active climate players for several decades,
only recently their important role has been recognized with the adoption of a more
polycentric climate regime under Paris. The U.S. state of California and the Canadian
3
Internationally, regional federal actors use their action capacities by actively enrolling in subnational
diplomacy and transnational networks. By informally collaborating with other sub-national, national, and
non-state entities, they work towards the achievement of innovative climate policy solutions and
acknowledge-sharing to be applied domestically (Leffel, 2018; Chaloux, 2022).
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Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
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province of Québec are among the leading federated units that have evidenced ambitious
climate efforts in line with the Paris Agreement (Ibidem). Having stood out for their
independent agency in the implementation of global climate standards, their prominent
role at the domestic and international levels suggests that a phenomenon of regional
climate leadership is in the making.
After long years of unrecognized efforts, California and Québec are currently
acknowledged by experts and actors in the field as actual climate leaders considering the
ambitious implementation of climate measures and policies (Chaloux et al., 2015;
Eatmon, 2009; Leffel, 2018; Setzer, 2015). With or without the national support of the
respective national governments, there has been a direct commitment from both cases
to the implementation of policies that support the premises of the Paris Agreement,
namely emission reductions and reporting established in Articles 4.1, 4.2., 4.4., 4.9,
4.19. Regardless of not being signatory parties: both have independently established
their greenhouse gases (GHG) emission reduction targets, deployed a set of policy
mechanisms and tools to tackle climate mitigation and adaption, and even joined several
bilateral and multilateral climate agreements with international partners (Chaloux,
2022). Having proactively demonstrated a willingness to be regarded as full-fledged
actors in the global climate regime inaugurated by Paris, California, and Québec are worth
analyzing cases that suggest the emergence of regional climate leadership.
Despite very limited international competencies
4
(dependent on Congress approval) but
considerable climate regulation jurisdictional capacities
5
, California, has gained a
reputation for applying the continent’s most ambitious emission targets but, especially,
for trying to carry America's climate commitments on the eve of Trump's withdrawal
(surpassing). Simultaneously, California is also well-known for actively engaging in
subnational diplomacy and transnational networks. Using its jurisdictional capacities on
climate-related policy, California has internally established its equivalent to the Nationally
Determined Contributions (NDC) concerning the 2030 emissions targets defined by the
Paris Agreement. Overall, the federal region has set an economy-wide GHG emission
reduction target for 2030 at 40% below 1990 levels and, as a member of the Under2
Coalition, it is also committed to the goal of reducing 80%-95% of emissions below 1990
levels by 2050. Similar to the NDC's scheme applied to Paris' signatory parties, California
has equally set, with Assembly Bill 32, the obligation of updating their GHG emission
reduction targets every five years. Internationally, California has also signed informal
agreements (e.g., memorandums of understanding) to perform its external action via
subnational climate diplomacy and transnational networks: along with Québec, California
4
According to the American Constitution states are expressly forbidden from negotiating formal treaties yet,
it grants limited access to international activity and often only with the consent of Congress reflecting the
legitimate interest of local communities. To avoid a delicate overstep of their legal bounds, state-level
officials celebrate informal arrangements such as cooperation agreements or memorandums of agreement;
international loan agreements; protocols of intent (or memorandums of understanding); exchange of letters
or notes; political declarations and statements. Importantly, although there is no formal ministry of
international affairs or relations in California, there is a Senate Office of International Relations as well as
the Governor’s International Affairs and Trade Development Representative.
5
The Clean Air Act gives California special authority to enact stricter air pollution standards in comparison to
federal policy. However, EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) must approve a waiver before California's
rules may go into effect.
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e-ISSN: 1647-7251
Vol. 14, Nº. 2 (November 2023-April 2024), pp. 341-357
Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
353
has founded a renowned cap-and-trade system that may deal with 80% of their overall
emissions both have joined; co-created, or signed notorious initiatives namely, the
Western Climate Initiative
6
(a collaboration set to create a cap and trade system in North
America); Regions4
7
(initially known as the Climate Group, a network led by non-central
governments focused on Sustainable Development); the Under2 Coalition
8
(a global
pledge aiming to achieve net-zero emissions in 2050); and the Regions Adapt
9
(three
multilateral organizations that collaborate, and share best practices and intelligence on
the development of climate policies).
Considering its almost unlimited jurisdiction internationally
10
but also in climate policy,
Québec, made use of its regulatory capacities to remarkably implemented one of the first
carbon levies in North America but also to actively engage in international activities
involving the achievement of Paris' targets. Similar to California, Québec has also set its
domestic equivalent to the 2030 NDC targets by fixing an economy-wide GHG emission
reduction target of 37,5% under the 1990 level by 2030 and the aim of reaching net-
zero emissions by 2050. Just like California, in 2020, Québec approved Bill 44
11
which
requires the update of a climate action plan and respective targets every five years.
Interestingly, Québec has equally mobilized its external action capacities to join the same
climate-networked initiatives as California, including the cap-and-trade system of which
Québec is a co-founder.
As past efforts became acknowledged, California and Québec multiplied the number of
mechanisms, policies, and action plans to position themselves as active players in the
global climate regime since the Paris Agreement was signed. Having done so as an
individual stand and as an expression of its self-governance capacities, the case of
Québec and California confirm that the landscape of global climate governance is growing
by filling federal leadership voids, aiding national governments, and adding essential and
needed capacity from the bottom-up (Leffel, 2018). In the end, we notice possible
empirical evidence that denotes the possible presence of regional climate leadership in
the cases of California and Québec.
Conclusion
Based on the Paris Agreement's recognition of needed action beyond the nation-state for
effective long-term resolutions in climate change, this paper identifies the opportunity
for a wide set of actors to become influential actors in global climate governance (climate
6
More information is available at: https://wci-inc.org/, accessed in may 2023.
7
More information is available at: https://regions4.org/, accessed in may 2023.
8
More information is available at: https://www.theclimategroup.org/under2-coalition, access in may 2023.
9
More information is available at: https://climateinitiativesplatform.org/index.php/RegionsAdapt, access in
may 2023.
10
Although Québec may not formally sign international treaties, the province may sign agreements and
memorandums of understanding. International Relations of Quebec are under the supervision of the Ministry
of International Relations and La Francophonie, being part of the Government of Quebec, which constitutes
a secondary jurisdiction of Canada. Equally relevant, all international treaties concluded by Canada that
involve Quebec’s matters of competence require the approval of Quebec’s National Assembly.
11
Bill 44 is officially entitled An Act mainly to ensure effective governance of the fight against climate change
and to promote electrification.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
Vol. 14, Nº. 2 (November 2023-April 2024), pp. 341-357
Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
354
leadership). With this acknowledgment, our discussion has sought to do a brief literature
review on climate leadership and polycentric climate governance to acknowledge a gap
and notice how the role of regions, especially regions in federal or decentralized political
systems, has not been yet considered under this framework.
We have started by contextualizing the post-Paris context where a gradual paradigm
transition in the arena of climate politics is taking place. Briefly, a transition from
monocentric to polycentric climate approaches is taking place as part of broader
transformations in the international climate regime led by the UNFCCC. A first but smooth
step of this transition was witnessed in 2015 by the time the Paris Agreement formally
invited non-party stakeholders ( i.e., civil society, the private sector, regions, and cities)
to the global effort of effectively addressing climate change considering that the
commitment endorsed by the parties was insufficient to deal with the challenge.
Regarding this fact, our analysis suggests that up-to-date literature on climate leadership
in polycentric policy contexts has overlooked empirical the role of federal regions in the
post-Paris period. Although there is already some conceptual development on what it
means to be a climate leader and how polycentric governance offers significant potential
for the occurrence of such a phenomenon, a reframing of the model was required to
consider regional federal action according to its legislative capacities. An empirical
application of such a framework to federal regions would lack accuracy in its analysis as
it would leave out considerable details of the phenomenon that are essential for its
explanation: self-governance.
Overall, this paper also identifies a lack of literature consideration for regional actors in
Paris’ polycentric context. Although these are frequently implicit in the several references
to subnational levels of climate action and their importance in achieving international
goals, they are often overlooked. Calling attention to this fact, we notice the emergence
of regional climate leadership by relying on empirical signs in the cases of California and
Québec. As federal units start setting their role as leading authorities of climate policy
implementation but also as actors with global-reaching influence in the climate regime
inaugurated by Paris, the phenomenon occurs at the internal and external dimensions
when the necessary competencies are gathered: (1) admission for the autonomous
implementation of (climate) territorial policies that are independent of the central state;
(2) admission for action across state boundaries and active engagement in climate
governance dynamics. Ultimately, regional climate leadership expresses the capacity of
regional federal governments to influence climate governance through the performance
of self-governance in the internal and external domains.
To conclude, we consider that our paper brings awareness to an important research gap
while establishing grounds for a wide set of future research options both theoretical and
empirical. Although scholars have suggested that the success of global climate
governance depends, at least, on the integration of non-state entities, particularly local
actors (Hsu, Weinfurter, and Xu, 2017), no study has addressed the phenomenon of
regional climate leadership beyond the state. We consider that it is of interest to have a
deeper understanding of regional climate leadership under polycentric conditions. Further
enlightenment could be brought through the empirical application of regional climate
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
Vol. 14, Nº. 2 (November 2023-April 2024), pp. 341-357
Seen but overlooked? The emergence of regional leadership
in polycentric climate governance after Paris
Ana Raquel Almeida Dias; Sandrina Antunes
355
leadership to specific case studies to figure out why there is a search for influence in
climate governance.
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