Dear all,

Another for August consideration: Sebastián Rubiano-Galvis and I have just 
published this piece for a Special Issue of International Negotiation (on 
negotiations pedagogy more generally, which might well be of interest too). 
This is based on the exercise I have been running off and on since 2012 (!) and 
which Sebastián and I redesigned for on-line, asynchronous teaching. He has 
taught it at University of San Francisco and now at U of Washington. This 
article also builds on a piece we wrote for Jinnah et al, Teaching 
Environmental Justice: Practices to Engage Students and Build Community (2023).

This is not quite the “let’s reach a deal” assignment, nor do students 
typically have time to really devote a lot of time to it (20 plus units and 
full time jobs plus extracurriculars tend to have that effect, likewise does 
the average workload of the teaching team). It is mostly drafted for students 
who have little to no background in political science or international 
relations but could fit that group too. And we focus it around justice and 
empathy - specifically, how to step into another country’s shoes (to the extent 
possible) and think about representing interests different from one’s own. It 
could also be adapted quite well, we think, to plastics treaty negotiations. 

Anyway, it can be taught in formats from in-person groups of 20 to what I am 
doing as I type: 250 students on-line, asynchronously during a 6 week summer 
intensive (with a 6 person team of TAs plus reader). This year, rather than the 
negotiations part, which admittedly is very had in this format, students are 
currently in groups, learning from each other about their countries and 
figuring out where their differences and commonalities could be on the Draft 
Resolution they are working on. 

Please let me know if you would like to know more but forgive me if you don’t 
hear back for a couple of weeks! (But also, different subject, let me know if 
you are gong to be at APSA and would like to join a GEP meet-up on the 
Thursday),

Back to nudging students to contribute to discussions in their rooms (many of 
which are going very well, thankfully)

The link is here 
<https://brill.com/view/journals/iner/aop/article-10.1163-15718069-bja10131/article-10.1163-15718069-bja10131.xml>.
 Abstract below.

Full cite: Rubiano-Galvis, Sebastian, and Kate O’Neill. "Experiential Learning 
in Times of Climate Crisis: An Environmental Justice Approach to International 
Negotiation Pedagogy." International Negotiation  (2025): 1–31.


Best,

Kate 

***************************************
Kate O'Neill
Professor, Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management,
Associate Dean of Student Affairs, Rausser College of Natural Resources
University of California at Berkeley


Abstract
Studies of negotiations pedagogy have found that roleplays and simulations play 
a critical role in successfully teaching international politics but are 
significantly underused. There has been little reflection on using simulations 
and roleplays in teaching and learning about global climate justice. In the 
last few years, we have designed a structured and scaffolded simulation of an 
international climate negotiation carried out in-person several times at 
University of California at Berkeley’s International Environmental Politics 
class and recently for the first time at University of San Francisco’s Global 
Environmental Politics class. The exercise is based on the UN Framework 
Convention on Climate Change – historically, the 2015 Paris Agreement, and 
subsequent negotiations. Drawing on various iterations of this exercise and the 
lessons we learned from it, as well as on accounts from students who have 
participated in the last couple of years, we propose a model to conceptualize 
and put into practice international negotiations pedagogy as it pertains to the 
international climate regime. Drawing on our experience conceiving and 
implementing this exercise, we argue that its emphasis on justice claims, 
empathy, and an ethically informed sense of student agency in and beyond the 
classroom contributes to and is in dialogue with scholarship on international 
negotiations pedagogy.

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