14 research outputs found

    Trade in the balance: reconciling trade and climate policy: report of the Working Group on Trade, Investment, and Climate Policy

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    This repository item contains a report published by the Working Group on Trade, Investment, and Climate Policy at The Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future at Boston University, and the Global Economic Governance Initiative at Boston University.This report outlines the general tensions between the trade and investment regime and climate policy, and outlines a framework toward making trade and investment rules more climate friendly. Members of the working group have contributed short pieces addressing a range of issues related to the intersection of trade and climate policy. The first two are by natural scientists. Anthony Janetos discusses the need to address the effects of international trade on efforts to limit the increase in global annual temperature to no more than 2oC over preindustrial levels. James J. Corbett examines the failure of the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) to adequately address the environmental implications of shipping and maritime transport. The next two pieces are by economists who examine economic aspects of the trade-climate linkage. Irene Monasterolo and Marco Raberto discuss the potential impacts of including fossil fuel subsidies reduction under the TTIP. Frank Ackerman explores the economic costs of efforts to promote convergence of regulatory standards between the United States and the European Union under the TTIP. The following two contributions are by legal scholars. Brooke Güven and Lise Johnson explore the potential for international investment treaties to redirect investment flows to support climate change mitigation and adaptation, particularly with regard to China and India. Matt Porterfield provides an overview of the ways in which both existing and proposed trade and investment agreements could have either “climate positive” or “climate negative” effects on mitigation policies. The final article is by Tao Hu, a former WTO trade and environment expert advisor for China and currently at the World Wildlife Fund, arguing that the definition of environmental goods and services’ under the WTO negotiations needs to be expanded to better incorporate climate change

    Trade in the balance: reconciling trade and climate policy: report of the Working Group on Trade, Investment, and Climate Policy

    Full text link
    This repository item contains a report published by the Working Group on Trade, Investment, and Climate Policy at The Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future at Boston University, and the Global Economic Governance Initiative at Boston University.This report outlines the general tensions between the trade and investment regime and climate policy, and outlines a framework toward making trade and investment rules more climate friendly. Members of the working group have contributed short pieces addressing a range of issues related to the intersection of trade and climate policy. The first two are by natural scientists. Anthony Janetos discusses the need to address the effects of international trade on efforts to limit the increase in global annual temperature to no more than 2oC over preindustrial levels. James J. Corbett examines the failure of the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) to adequately address the environmental implications of shipping and maritime transport. The next two pieces are by economists who examine economic aspects of the trade-climate linkage. Irene Monasterolo and Marco Raberto discuss the potential impacts of including fossil fuel subsidies reduction under the TTIP. Frank Ackerman explores the economic costs of efforts to promote convergence of regulatory standards between the United States and the European Union under the TTIP. The following two contributions are by legal scholars. Brooke Güven and Lise Johnson explore the potential for international investment treaties to redirect investment flows to support climate change mitigation and adaptation, particularly with regard to China and India. Matt Porterfield provides an overview of the ways in which both existing and proposed trade and investment agreements could have either “climate positive” or “climate negative” effects on mitigation policies. The final article is by Tao Hu, a former WTO trade and environment expert advisor for China and currently at the World Wildlife Fund, arguing that the definition of environmental goods and services’ under the WTO negotiations needs to be expanded to better incorporate climate change

    The Science Performance of JWST as Characterized in Commissioning

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    This paper characterizes the actual science performance of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), as determined from the six month commissioning period. We summarize the performance of the spacecraft, telescope, science instruments, and ground system, with an emphasis on differences from pre-launch expectations. Commissioning has made clear that JWST is fully capable of achieving the discoveries for which it was built. Moreover, almost across the board, the science performance of JWST is better than expected; in most cases, JWST will go deeper faster than expected. The telescope and instrument suite have demonstrated the sensitivity, stability, image quality, and spectral range that are necessary to transform our understanding of the cosmos through observations spanning from near-earth asteroids to the most distant galaxies.Comment: 5th version as accepted to PASP; 31 pages, 18 figures; https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1538-3873/acb29

    Assessing the Climate Impacts of U.S. Trade Agreements

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    Meeting the ambitious goals of the Paris Agreement will require the United States and other major greenhouse gas (GHG) emitters to integrate climate change considerations into all relevant areas of economic policy. The United States, however, has conspicuously failed to do so with regard to international trade negotiations. International trade agreements tend to increase GHG emissions due to the economic effects of trade liberalization, including increases in the scale of economic activity and changes in the composition of the affected economies. Trade agreements can also affect climate change in less quantifiable but potentially more significant ways by restricting the ability of governments to implement measures designed to mitigate climate change. Trade and investment rules in U.S. trade agreements have already been invoked to challenge a number of policies relevant to climate change, ranging from renewable energy programs to the Obama administration’s decision to reject the Keystone XL pipeline. Yet despite the growing evidence of the relevance of trade policy to climate change, the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) largely ignores potential climate impacts when preparing environmental reviews of proposed trade agreements as required under Executive Order 13141. This Article explores how the USTR could address climate change within the environmental review process to both assess the potential economically driven and regulatory impacts of proposed trade agreements for climate change and identify options for mitigating those impacts

    Varia

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    Dans ce numéro, Perspective se fait l’écho de la recherche internationale en histoire de l’art moderne et contemporain. La nouvelle couverture, parée de quatre images en couleurs, reflète l’élargissement du champ géographique couvert par la revue quant à l’art et son histoire. Quatre continents (Afrique, Amérique, Asie, Europe) sont approchés dans des articles qui questionnent les notions de centre et de périphérie sur les plans artistique et historiographique. Philosophes, anthropologues, architectes, historiens de l’art (conservateurs et universitaires) croisent leurs expériences de l’œuvre, de l’objet d’art, de la technique, de l’exposition et du musée, tandis que les catégories stylistiques telles que le baroque et l’art écologique sont revisitées en parallèle de comptes rendus de lecture sur la sculpture funéraire, le paragone ou encore Federico Barocci. Ce numéro est en vente sur le site du Comptoir des presses d'universités

    Actualité en histoire de l’art

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    Ce numéro est l’occasion d’aborder de grands thèmes transversaux de l’histoire de l’art – de la place de la couleur dans l’Antiquité à la culture visuelle des jeux sportifs à l’époque moderne –, comme des figures singulières, Jean Jacques Lequeu et Edgar Degas, à l’aune d’une historiographie renouvelée qui défie certaines notions clefs de la discipline, l’anachronisme pour le premier, la généalogie pour le second. Témoins de la vitalité de la recherche actuelle, des bilans historiographiques sur l’architecture des bidonvilles, sur la naissance de la discipline en Europe ou encore sur la valeur refuge de l’art au temps du capitalisme et de la mondialisation, complètent ce volume. L’œuvre de l’historien de la sensibilité Alain Corbin est mise à l’honneur à travers l’entretien que lui consacre Georges Vigarello, parcours sensoriel cheminant de l’ouïe à l’odorat, du toucher à la vue, du goût aux perceptions « profondes », qui met notamment en exergue la manière dont son approche, empathique avec la vie, a su faire l’histoire d’objets évanescents, voire évanouis. Ces pages sont enfin l’occasion d’ouvrir deux débats à l’actualité brûlante, qui entendent offrir des pistes de réflexion sur des sujets particulièrement sensibles. Portant sur l’art dégénéré et la spoliation des Juifs durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, le premier jette un éclairage sur ces questions par un fort ancrage historique, quand le second se penche sur l’histoire complexe de la constitution des collections muséales d’art non-occidental en interrogeant la possibilité de leur restitution aujourd’hui. Ce numéro est en vente sur le site du Comptoir des presses d'universités
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