02002nam a22001217a 4500008004100000100001700041245006900058260004600127300003200173520151900205650011001724773004601834220215b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aNanda, Samar aHow to look at the Covid-19 pandemic through climate governance? aIndian Journal of Public Administration  a67(3), Sep, 2021: p.383-395 aClimate change has been the ‘wicked problem’ the world has struggled to address so far. Further, the Covid-19 pandemic has deeply affected the soft underbelly of global governance by redrawing boundaries and fissures in the existing system. The pandemic is possibly the single biggest event in the post-Second World War period or in the last seventy years to shape and affect human emotion, response and survival instincts. The world has seen catastrophic changes and huge loss of life. There are multiple parallels and differences between the two of the most significant challenges faced by the humanity. Even though climate scientists were harping on the catastrophic impact of climate change for the last four decades, at the broader human consciousness level, the severity of the problem has never sunk into the common psyche. Covid-19 is a vivid example as to how a pathogen-led pandemic can torment and pervade the all-powerful and the highest evolved species on the earth, that is, the mankind. In this backdrop, climate governance and an ideal-type governance typology is being looked at to provide some key insights and possible answers for the future. The concern has been looked through at two levels: personal at the behavioural level and collective at the global-scale levels. Future prescriptions rooted in the current realities have been explored to find a way out of the crisis and the key learning points from the pandemic to face the future with more confidence and certainty. – Reproduced  aCovid-19, Climate governance, Climate leviathan, United Nations, Life-vs-livelihood, Paris climate accord aIndian Journal of Public Administration