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FOREIGN AFFAIRS ISSUE (1) answer(s).
 
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Chinese climate-change policy, 1988-2013: moving on up / Stensdal, Iselin   Journal Article
Stensdal, Iselin Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract China's domestic climate-change policy has changed remarkably since 1988. In the late 1980s, the central government viewed climate change as a highly scientific, foreign affairs issue, and any policies were limited to scientific investigations. A mere decade later, climate change was seen as a developmental issue. By 2007 climate change had become a national priority. Since then, climate-change policies have expanded in measure and in scope. In this article I employ the advocacy coalition framework (ACF) to explain the policy changes. The ACF takes into account the overall sophistication of socioeconomic conditions in China as well as the climate-change advocacy coalition's communications and active use of their amassed knowledge to influence policy.
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