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Wednesday, Dec 17, 2025
The McGill Journal of Political Science

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Tag: climate change

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Opinion: Will COVID-19 Lead to Cooperation on Climate Change?

It’s no exaggeration to say that billions of people have been detrimentally impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. And even the world’s most developed countries have seen themselves exposed by their More

Posted On : April 26, 2020 Published By : Kate Miller
Category:
  • Featured
  • Political Theory

COVID-19: Policy Implications for the Climate Crisis

Governments often opt for different strategies in their efforts to mitigate similar issues. COVID-19, the virus causing the worst public health crisis in several decades, has forced  governments to take More

Posted On : March 30, 2020 Published By : Jane Warren
Category:
  • Canadian Politics
  • Featured

Flattening Emissions: COVID-19 and Climate Change

As panic over COVID-19 permeates media outlets, hopeful and pessimistic voices alike have pointed to the potential effects this crisis will have on climate change. Protecting the environment and building More

Posted On : March 21, 2020 Published By : Marie Fester
Category:
  • Comparative Politics
  • Featured

Reduce, Reuse, Reassess: Systemic Flaws in Modern Recycling

Multiple times a day, you undertake the process of waste disposal. Often, you might seek out bins labelled “recycling”, and half-hazardly deposit trash through one of these holes. As a More

Posted On : February 4, 2020 Published By : Jasper Scott
Category:
  • Featured
  • Political Theory

What We Owe to Each Other: Individual and Collective Responsibility in the 21st Century

Collective action is an extremely powerful mechanism for political change, as demonstrated in this past “year of protest”, but today, the prevailing rhetoric about how to solve the world’s problems More

Posted On : February 4, 2020 Published By : Jessica Maloney
Category:
  • Featured
  • Political Theory

Can Democratic Decision-Making Adequately Address the Climate Crisis?

While many would argue that democracy is the optimal form of government to foster and protect citizens’ well-being, they may not realize the ways in which it can hinder progress. More

Posted On : January 26, 2020 Published By : Jane Warren
Category:
  • Comparative Politics
  • Featured

Why Climate Change Will Reinforce Current Power Structures, Not Change Them

Climate change is the most pressing international concern of our time. Millennials and Generation Z-ers across the globe rank it as the most important issue facing humanity. Recent wildfires in More

Posted On : January 22, 2020 Published By : Jacob Berk
Category:
  • Comparative Politics
  • Featured

Australia’s Bushfires and the Political Economy of Climate Change Denial

Residents and visitors on the small island of Mallacoota, a vacation spot between Sydney and Melbourne, began the new year under a blood-red sky. Photos of residents and tourists being More

Posted On : January 13, 2020 Published By : Maya Garfinkel
Category:
  • Featured
  • International Relations

Australian Politicians Fail to Confront the Climate Emergency as Bushfires Rage

Wildfires, or bushfires as they are commonly known in Australia, are a naturally occurring phenomenon in the Australian environment. Before the arrival of humans on the Australian continent, bushfires were More

Posted On : November 23, 2019 Published By : Rubana Murshed
Category:
  • Featured
  • International Relations

Out of this World: Exploring the Role of Global Powers in Space Governance

In 1951, the Soviet space program launched the first dogs into space, later going on to accomplish the first ever human spaceflight in 1961. In 1969, during peak Cold War More

Posted On : November 21, 2019 Published By : Elizabeth Franceschini

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