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Steering responses to climate change from the centre of government: A stocktaking

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Listed:
  • Misha Kaur
  • Johannes Klein
  • Gloriana Madrigal
  • Timothy Tennant
  • Emma Phillips
  • Louna Wemaere
  • Ivan Stola

Abstract

This paper takes stock of the institutional set-ups, mechanisms and practices used by governments, and in particular centres of government, to steer climate change policy. To respond effectively to climate change, governments need decision-making and co-ordinating processes that reflect the complexity and pressing nature of the climate crisis, the multitude of stakeholders involved, and the need to balance between short-term and long-term policy objectives. With their unique positioning, centres of government in OECD Member countries often play a crucial role in providing leadership and co-ordination for climate policy. The first part of this paper identifies the institutional arrangements, mandates and skillsets of centres of government for climate-related action. The second part analyses the centre’s stewardship role at different stages of the policy cycle, touching on strategic planning, co-ordination, the development of evidence-informed policies, and monitoring as well as overall efforts to “green” public administrations.

Suggested Citation

  • Misha Kaur & Johannes Klein & Gloriana Madrigal & Timothy Tennant & Emma Phillips & Louna Wemaere & Ivan Stola, 2023. "Steering responses to climate change from the centre of government: A stocktaking," OECD Working Papers on Public Governance 65, OECD Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:oec:govaaa:65-en
    DOI: 10.1787/b95c8396-en
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