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Access, Technology, and Transition: Mapping the Themes of the Debate on Energy at the United Nations General Assembly (2000-2020)* * Article submitted for the Special Edition call: The Politics and Policies of Climate Change in Brazil. ,** ** Funding information: This study is supported by the Project ‘Multilateralismo e Desafios Globais: Passado, Presente e Futuro’ - National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq), grant number 420041/2021-4.

How are the subjects of energy and energy justice discussed within multilateral forums? Given the significance of this subject and the disparities among nations, examining how energy-related matters are addressed in intergovernmental arenas reveals how governments manage the implications of inequalities in basic needs, such as energy. To investigate the phenomenon, we monitored how the seven categories identified in the literature – ‘Efficiency’, ‘Access to Energy’, ‘Renewable Energies’, ‘Capacity Building’, ‘Research and Development’, ‘Technology Transfer’, and ‘Financing’ – were evoked in multilateral discussions. Specifically, we used the ‘UN General Assembly Sponsorship Dataset’ to identify, through content analysis, 59 draft resolutions that mentioned these energy themes between 2000 and 2020. We analyzed this corpus and detailed the themes, their combination, and the most involved countries. Through cluster analysis and correspondence analysis, we identified three major groups of themes, ‘Access to energy’, ‘Technology’ and ‘Energy Transition’, while ‘Capacity Building’ appeared as a cross-cutting issue. We also identified that large multilateral groups were an important factor driving engagement with the topic, as G77 members, and specially those pertaining to Central and South Asia, were among the most active players.

Energy; energy justice; UN; cluster analysis; correspondence analysis


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