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The '''Cities for Climate Protection program''' (CCP) is one of three major global transnational municipal networks aimed at reducing urban greenhouse gas emissions. Established in 1990 by the International Union of Local Authorities and the [[United Nations Environment Programme]], one of the largest global transnational networks, the International Council for Local Environment Initiatives (ICLEI), presented a framework to represent local government environmental concerns internationally <ref>{{cite journal|last=Betsill|first=Michele|coauthors=Bulkeley, H|title=Transnational Networks and Global Environmental Governance: The Cities for Climate Protection Program|journal=International Studies Quarterly|year=2004|volume=48|pages=
== The Cities for Climate Protection program ==
Established in 1993, the CCP program houses more than 650 municipal governments representing over 30 participatory countries <ref name="Toly, 2008">{{cite journal|last=Toly|first=Noah|title=Transnational Municipal Networks in Climate Politics: From Global Governance to Global Politics|journal=Globalisations|year=2008|volume=5|issue=3|pages=
ICLEI’s initial pilot project, the Urban CO2 Reduction Project, brought together American, Canadian and European cities to develop a municipal planning framework to reduce GHG emissions and produce an energy management strategy <ref name="Lindseth, 2004">{{cite journal|last=Lindseth|first=Gard|title=The Cities for Climate Protection Campaign (CCPC) and the Framing of Local Climate Policy|journal=Local Environment|year=2004|volume=9|issue=4|pages=
• ‘Re-enforce local commitments in reducing urban GHG emissions
• Disseminating planning and management tools to facilitate development of cost-effective CO2 reduction policies
• Research and development of best practices, and development of model municipalities that lead by example
• Enhancing national and international ties so that municipal-level actions are included in national action plans and international deliberations’ <ref name="ICLEI 1993b">{{cite book|last=ICLEI|title=Cities for Climate Protection. An International Campaign to Reduce Urban Emissions of Greenhouse Gases|year=1993b|publisher=ICLEI|___location=Toronto}}</ref>
=== Becoming a CCP program member ===
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<ref name="Betsill, M. M. & Bulkeley, H. 2004" />
The five milestones help local authorities understand how municipal decisions concern urban energy use, illustrating global climate change mitigation through reduced energy use <ref name="Lindseth, 2004" />. The founding body of the CCP, ICLEI, provides member cities with guidance, training and technical assistance to complete the five milestones. The member cities of the CCP program is what make it a transnational municipal network, structured through regional and national campaign offices.
== Decentralisation of the CCP program ==
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== The CCP as a Local Climate Policy ==
Stemming from membership, CCP cities publicly demonstrate their recognition of global climate change as a ‘legitimate local concern,’ committed to controlling the threats of local greenhouse gas emissions <ref name="Betsill, 2001">{{cite journal|last=Betsill|first=Michele|title=Mitigating Climate Change in US Cities: opportunities and obstacles|journal=Local Environment|year=2001|volume=6|issue=4|pages=
The CCP program is a resource that [[Municipal government]]s have drawn upon in advancing particular local energy or environmental policies with sizeable global climate consequences, to a manageable scale in which local governments should act and be concerned <ref name="Betsill, M. M. & Bulkeley, H. 2004" />. The program in relation to local climate policy provides inspirations, recognition and legitimation surrounding the environmental responsibilities of local government and in linking such to existent local agendas <ref name="Betsill, M. M. & Bulkeley, H. 2004" />. The CCP cities have negotiated, reiterated and sustained many actions concerning local climate protection <ref name="Keck & Sikkink, 1998">{{cite book|last=Keck|first=M|title=Activists Beyond Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics|year=1998|publisher=Cornell University Press|___location=New York|coauthors=Sikkink, K}}</ref>, in stabilising urban GHG emission reductions.
== The CCP program as a Transnational Governance Network ==
Transnational governance is distinct in that it involves both state and non-state actors, contributing differing sources and capacities of authority <ref name="Andonova et al, 2009">{{cite journal|last=Andonova|first=L. B|coauthors=Betsill, M. M. & Bulkeley, H|title=Transnational Climate Governance.|journal=Global Environmental Politics|year=2009|volume=9|issue=2|pages=
<ref name="Slaughter, 2004">{{cite book|last=Slaughter|first=A. M.|title=A New World Order|year=2004|publisher=Princeton University Press|___location=Princeton, NJ}}</ref> and <ref name="Raustiala, K. 2002">{{cite journal|last=Raustiala|first=K|title=The Architecture of International Co-operation: Trans-governmental Networks and the Future of International Law|journal=Virginia Journal of International Law|year=2002|volume=43|issue=1|pages=
=== CCP Cities in Maintaining their Transnational Governance Network ===
Key to securing transnational governance network participation are CCP cities whom see the program as a means of promoting their interests, values and norms in regards to climate change at a local scale. In maintaining a valuable, worthwhile, and effective GHG emissions reductions governance network, member CCP cities must establish open connections within the network, creating solid network interactions <ref name="Betsill, M. M. & Bulkeley, H. 2004" />. Member cities illustrating open connections toward the CCP program, through the active involvement of continual monitoring and reporting of energy use, and participation in CCP program workshops, often gain additional financial resources from the network <ref name="Betsill, M. M. & Bulkeley, H. 2004" />. Alone, the production and exchange of information from CCP cities is insufficient in maintaining a transnational network. Forged on the basis financial and political resources are offered to member cities by the CCP program, based on the formation of close network links, openly connected member cities receive legitimacy of their ideas, creation of knowledge for local climate protection and shared norms, rather than the reliance upon the dissemination of technical information actively sought upon by less connected CCP cities. In maintaining a significant connection as a CCP city within a transnational governance network, members must not exclusively rely upon the dissemination of information, but rather build upon knowledge, norms and resources linked within the process of building and maintaining networks <ref name="Betsill, M. M. & Bulkeley, H. 2004" />.
== Benefits and Successes of the CCP program as a Transnational Governance Network ==
As a transnational governance network, joining as a CCP member city is a benefit to a city in itself. Advantages for CCP cities account for exchanges of experience, access to funding and political kudos, and the development of direct links between CCP member cities from the local to international level <ref name="Kern & Bulkeley, 2009">{{cite journal|last=Kern|first=Kristine|coauthors=Bulkeley, H|title=Cities, Europeanisation and Multi-Level Governance: Governing Climate Change through Transnational Municipal Networks|journal=Journal of Common Market Studies|year=2009|volume=47|issue=2|pages=
Crucially, while it is seen single local government action on reducing GHG emissions may be relatively ineffective, working together under a transnational governance network frame collectively, such as the CCP cities, can make an important contribution towards the reduction and mitigation of global climate change <ref name="Fay, 2007">{{cite journal|last=Fay|first=Chris|title=Think Locally, Act Globally: Lessons to Learn from the Cities for Climate Protection Campaign|journal=A Journal of Politics|year=2007|volume=7|pages=
== Barriers Toward CCP program Local Policy Action ==
Three main institutional barriers exist in transforming CCP program political will into policy action; bureaucratic structure, administrative capacity and budgetary constraints. Bureaucratic structure negatively affects the workings of the CCP program, as there is often no institutional home for climate change policy making <ref name="Betsill, 2001" />. Many municipal governments have specialised departments with specific mandates with little interaction between departments, posing problems for CCP municipal governments as to control GHG emissions requires collaborative efforts from departmental areas of waste-management, health, air quality, transport and land-use planning amongst others <ref name="Betsill, 2001" />. Thus the CCP program requires municipal governments to institutionalise efforts to control GHG emissions, housing all issues under one roof of say an environmental department.
Lack of administrative capacity leaves many cities without the facilities to develop local policies and programmes for climate change mitigation, leaving it increasingly difficult and time-consuming to address climate change at the municipal level <ref name="Betsill, 2001" />. Many US cities in particular are unable or unwilling to provide adequate resources to address this issue due to more pressing agenda issues, and many personnel lack the technical capacity to monitor and analyse GHG emissions due to highly complex processes and inadequate access to necessary data <ref name="Kates et al, 1998">{{cite journal|last=Kates|first=R. W|coauthors=Mayfield, M. W., Torrie, R. D. & Witcher, B|title=Methods for estimating greenhouse gases from local places|journal=Local Environment|year=1998|volume=3|issue=3|pages=
Budgetary constraints emerge through an unwillingness to invest financial resources into climate change mitigation strategies. Many city budgets constrain the flexibility of municipal government officials to invest in GHG reduction projects <ref name="Nijkamp & Perrels, 1994">{{cite book|last=Nijkamp|first=P|title=Sustainable Cities in Europe: a comparative analysis of urban energy-environmental policies|year=1994|publisher=Earthscan|___location=London|author=Perrels, A}}</ref>, viewing the issue as a luxury expenditure <ref name="Press, 1998">{{cite journal|last=Press|first=D|title=Local environmental policy capacity: a framework for research|journal=Natural Resources Journal|year=1998|volume=38|pages=
▲Budgetary constraints emerge through an unwillingness to invest financial resources into climate change mitigation strategies. Many city budgets constrain the flexibility of municipal government officials to invest in GHG reduction projects <ref name="Nijkamp & Perrels, 1994">{{cite book|last=Nijkamp|first=P|title=Sustainable Cities in Europe: a comparative analysis of urban energy-environmental policies|year=1994|publisher=Earthscan|___location=London|author=Perrels, A}}</ref>, viewing the issue as a luxury expenditure <ref name="Press, 1998">{{cite journal|last=Press|first=D|title=Local environmental policy capacity: a framework for research|journal=Natural Resources Journal|year=1998|volume=38|pages=29-52}}</ref>. It is not un-common in response however for CCP municipal governments to convince officials to invest in some GHG reduction technologies, with the argument money saved through mitigation strategies can be used for re-investment in further mitigation strategies <ref name="Betsill, 2001" />.
== References ==
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