Environmental NGO Influence in
International Climate Negotiations
Conceptual Approaches to
determine NGO impact
Transnational
Advocacy
Networks
Mico & Macro-demands of NGO's
Friends with the
government
Foes with the
government
Interdependence between the
National and International Levels
Treaties
International Norms
encouraged via
transnational advocacy
networks
Markets
Direct routes of influence
Time Lag of influence
Recurring negotiation cycles
Activist Strategies (Protests& demonstrations)
Information Politics
Symbolic politics
Leverage politics
Accountability politics
Lobbyist Strategies
Key Prerequisites
Access to the government
representatives
Domestic
level
International
level
Resources (information
& knowledge)
Engaging in activities
Working with
negotiators
Providing
advice
Communicating
demands
Government representatives
receive their communications
Hypothesis
Influence is higher when NGOs provide input early in
the negotiations before governments decide on their
negotiation positions. Medium-term influence can still
occur in subsequent negotiation rounds.
Large-scale public pressure via demonstrations and high
medi coverage influencesnegotiationstoward a
negotiation outcome
Lobbyists need to form close networks to government
representatives and are more likely to be influential as
friends offering capacity-building support.