KELLOW, Anynsley
'Problems in international environmental governance' or ' a policy analyst looks at the world... this being a tale of how the hopes of mice and men in geneva are dashed in canberra'
- Oxford : Blackwell Publishers Limited, June 1997
Concern about international environmental governance has shifted from the problems in having multilateral environmental agreements adopted to trying to ensure that the agreements which are negotiated are implemented, and that they produce positive environmental outcomes. this article argues that features of the international policy process which assist domestic policy implementation. This is often because business interests which are marginalised during policy adoption are more influential at the domestic level at which policy must influential at the domestic level at which policy must influential at the domestic level at which policy must be implemented. This asymmentry is explained by suggesting that-rather than their being 'two-level games' (as Putnam suggested) - there are (in Lowi's terms) distintictive arenas of power at the international and national levels. Improving policy effectiveness requires the distribuition of power in each arena to be made more symmetrical