Dear all:

The 6th International Conference on Public Policy 
<https://www.ippapublicpolicy.org/conference/icpp6-toronto-2023/17> will take 
place in Toronto, Canada, June 27th-29th, 2023. I have organized a panel with 
the following title: Climate change and energy access in Africa: Interrogating 
policy action (Topic 14, Panel 14). The panel has been accepted. The call for 
papers is open until January 31, 2023. Please consider submitting a paper to 
present at the conference and for the panel. Please email me with any 
questions. Here is a description of the panel:

Papers are invited that consider one or both policy challenges of climate 
change and/or energy provision in Africa. Papers using a diversity of research 
methods, from a range of disciplines, and focused on one or more countries on 
the continent are welcome and encouraged, this includes countries north or 
south of the Sahara. What should unify the paper submissions is a desire to 
critically interrogate national policy responses to climate change, energy 
provision or both. Papers should acknowledge how national policy action is 
evolving and responding to social, ecological and economic needs of the 
country. This could include a focus on how policies and programs are: meeting 
the needs of citizens, thus focusing on equity and justice in policy; mediating 
the demands or priorities of the global political economic system, thus 
focusing on questions of policy diffusion, agency, or resistance; and, 
responding to the domestic political, economic, social and environmental 
conditions of the country, thus focusing on state capacity and autonomy in 
policy design and implementation. Ultimately, papers should go beyond 
describing how climate change is affecting countries, or the state of energy 
access in one or more countries. Papers should examine the complexity of these 
policy problems, develop hypotheses about conditions when states act in 
particular ways to respond to these challenges, and share original knowledge in 
order to help place African experiences centrally in policy theory.

Sincerely,

Chris

Christopher Gore, Ph.D.
Professor
Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson University)
Department of Politics and Public Administration
Graduate Program in Environmental Applied Science & Management
christophergore.info



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