Mixed Methods Analysis of Global Plastics Negotiations through Reports and Data

Session Number

1

Advisor(s)

Dr.Colin Kuehl, Northern Illinois University

Location

A113

Discipline

Environmental Science

Start Date

15-4-2026 10:15 AM

End Date

15-4-2026 11:00 AM

Abstract

Plastic pollution has become a major global environmental challenge in the 21st century. This led the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA) to create a historical revolution, which created an international legally binding instrument (ILBI) to address plastic pollution across its full life cycle. These negotiations, overseen by the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC), took place over the past three years, with a total of six sessions. These negotiations included debates over treaty scope, means of implementation, financing, and much more. Despite the clear impact and relevance of these debates, systematic analysis of the negotiation process itself is currently limited. This project applies a mixed-methods approach to determine patterns within the global plastics negotiations. Using the official Environmental Negotiations Bulletin (ENB) reports for the negotiations, we conducted quantitative text analysis, including word frequency analysis, bag-of-words modeling, and sentiment analysis, to identify shifts in issue emphasis and tone of negotiation across INC sessions. In addition to these quantitative findings, we used a qualitative analysis of the negotiations, which gave the broader political trends of the negotiations. In using this new mixed-methods approach, this project seeks to identify emerging patterns in negotiation dynamics, issue framing, and environmental policy

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Apr 15th, 10:15 AM Apr 15th, 11:00 AM

Mixed Methods Analysis of Global Plastics Negotiations through Reports and Data

A113

Plastic pollution has become a major global environmental challenge in the 21st century. This led the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA) to create a historical revolution, which created an international legally binding instrument (ILBI) to address plastic pollution across its full life cycle. These negotiations, overseen by the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC), took place over the past three years, with a total of six sessions. These negotiations included debates over treaty scope, means of implementation, financing, and much more. Despite the clear impact and relevance of these debates, systematic analysis of the negotiation process itself is currently limited. This project applies a mixed-methods approach to determine patterns within the global plastics negotiations. Using the official Environmental Negotiations Bulletin (ENB) reports for the negotiations, we conducted quantitative text analysis, including word frequency analysis, bag-of-words modeling, and sentiment analysis, to identify shifts in issue emphasis and tone of negotiation across INC sessions. In addition to these quantitative findings, we used a qualitative analysis of the negotiations, which gave the broader political trends of the negotiations. In using this new mixed-methods approach, this project seeks to identify emerging patterns in negotiation dynamics, issue framing, and environmental policy