• Title/Summary/Keyword: 지구적 시티즌십

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World Wide Views on Climate and Energy 2015 in Korea as a Global Deliberative Governance ('지구적 숙의 거버넌스'로서 유엔기후변화협상에 관한 세계시민회의)

  • Lee, Young Hee;Jeong, In Kyung
    • Journal of Science and Technology Studies
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.1-31
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    • 2015
  • World Wide Views on Climate and Energy held on 6 June 2015 was a structured citizens' deliberative consultation forum involving 10,000 citizens in 77 countries, and South Korea was one of the participating countries. Citizen participants, selected to reflect the demographic diversity in their countries or regions, were given information beforehand and deliberated for a full day with other citizens and voted on an identical set of questions, designed to reflect policy controversies at the UN COP negotiations to be held in Paris on December 2015. This study, firstly, analyzes the backgrounds and purposes of World Wide Views on Climate and Energy and reports the WWViews event held in Seoul, Korea before examining the theoretical implication of it. And then, this study discusses about the features and opportunities of World Wide Views on Climate and Energy as a way of forming a global deliberative governance by focusing on deliberative democracy, citizen participatory governance, and global citizenship.

A Comparative Study of World Wide Views on Climate and Energy 2015 (유엔기후변화협상에 관한 세계시민회의 결과의 국제비교)

  • Kim, Jik-Soo;Lee, Young Hee
    • Journal of Science and Technology Studies
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.65-97
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    • 2015
  • This essay aims to investigate the characteristics of the views of citizen participants of World Wide Views on Climate and Energy which was organized internationally targeting global policy making in Paris at COP21. It also analyzes the views of Korean citizen participants on climate change from the international comparative perspective. For this purpose, we try to outline the results of the consultations which offer 29 issues categorized into five sessions, such as importance of tackling climate change, tools to tackle climate change, UN negotiations and national commitments, fairness and distribution of efforts, making and keeping climate promises. As a result, we come to show some patterns and characteristics of the views of citizen participants in global and national context. Finally, we discuss some policy and theoretical implications of our findings regarding the future of international convention for climate change and of global citizenship formation.