Content
Undated material is presented at the end, although it may be more recent than other items
December 2024, Volume 24, Issue 4
- 475-496 Should we regulate forests through free trade agreements?
by Tamara Grigoras - 497-513 Reconciling the Incongruence between the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety to the Convention on Biological Diversity and the GATT/WTO Rules
by Nsikan-Abasi Odong - 515-538 Legal analysis of the CITES convention in terms of Turkish administrative and judicial processes
by Çağdan Uyar & Osman Devrim Elvan - 539-564 Intermediaries and complexity: assessing emissions-based governance in the European Union’s EU-ETS
by Kyle S. Herman - 565-588 Is transparency furthering clarity in multilateral climate governance? The case of climate finance
by Robert Bergsvik & Aarti Gupta & Romain Weikmans & Ina Möller - 589-610 Strengthening the Paris Agreement through trade? The potential and limitations of EU preferential trade agreements for climate governance
by Caroline Bertram & Hermine Coppenolle - 611-616 Environmental public interest litigation in China, by Xi Wang, Xiaobo Zhao, Noeleen McNamara. Springer Press, 2023, 687pp, 199.99$. ISBN-9783031265259 (Hardcover), ISBN-9783031265280 (Softcover)
by Ran An
September 2024, Volume 24, Issue 2
- 257-288 Doomed to fail? A call to reform global climate governance and greenhouse gas inventories
by Kyle S. Herman - 289-308 Bridges over troubled waters: Climate clubs, alliances, and partnerships as safeguards for effective international cooperation?
by Heiner Luepke & Karsten Neuhoff & Catherine Marchewitz - 309-324 A perspective on the significance of reporting climate change adaptation information to the united nations framework convention on climate change
by K. B. Mantlana & M. Ndiitwani & S. Ndhleve - 325-348 Pathways of scientific input into intergovernmental negotiations: a new agreement on marine biodiversity
by Ina Tessnow-von Wysocki & Alice B. M. Vadrot - 349-372 WTO negotiations and repurposing agriculture subsidies for a sustainable future
by Sachin Kumar Sharma & Paavni Mathur & Ahamed Ashiq Shajahan & Lakshmi Swathi Ganti & Alisha Goswami - 373-391 The split ladder of policy problems, participation, and politicization: constitutional water change in Ecuador and Chile
by Margot Hurlbert & Joyeeta Gupta - 393-421 The environmental rule of law and the protection of human rights defenders: law, society, technology, and markets
by Elif Oral - 423-448 Arctic wetlands, an evaluation of progress towards implementation of the Ramsar convention on wetlands: 1978–2022
by Tom Barry - 449-467 The forest policy outputs of regional regimes: a qualitative comparative analysis on the effects of formalization, hegemony and issue-focus around the globe
by Pradip Kumar Sarker & Lukas Giessen & Max Göhrs & Sohui Jeon & Minette Nago & Fredy David Polo-Villanueva & Sarah Lilian Burns - 469-470 Correction: The forest policy outputs of regional regimes: a qualitative comparative analysis on the effects of formalization, hegemony and issue-focus around the globe
by Pradip Kumar Sarker & Lukas Giessen & Max Göhrs & Sohui Jeon & Minette Nago & Fredy David Polo-Villanueva & Sarah Lilian Burns - 471-473 Yixian Sun: Certifying China: the rise and limits of transnational sustainability governance in emerging economies
by Flavia Fabiano
March 2024, Volume 24, Issue 1
- 1-6 Introduction: What next for supply-side policy?
by Peter Newell & Angela Carter - 7-26 Understanding supply-side climate policies: towards an interdisciplinary framework
by Peter Newell & Angela Carter - 27-28 Correction: Understanding supply-side climate policies: towards an interdisciplinary framework
by Peter Newell & Angela Carter - 29-48 Reconciling Ireland’s climate ambitions with climate policy and practice: challenges, contradictions and barriers
by Amanda Slevin & John Barry - 49-74 Supply-side climate policy and fossil fuels in developing countries: a neo-Gramscian perspective
by Augusto Heras - 75-90 What next for supply-side policy in the south: emerging lessons from Ecuador’s Yasuní initiative
by Pedro Alarcón - 91-120 Least developed countries versus fossil fuel incumbents: strategies, divisions, and barriers at the United Nations climate negotiations
by Choyon Kumar Saha - 121-139 From national ban to global climate policy renewal: Denmark’s path to leading on oil extraction phase out
by Sarah Greene & Angela V. Carter - 141-166 The environmental and economic effects of international cooperation on restricting fossil fuel supply
by Harro Asselt & Panagiotis Fragkos & Lauri Peterson & Kostas Fragkiadakis - 167-167 Correction: The environmental and economic effects of international cooperation on restricting fossil fuel supply
by Harro Asselt & Panagiotis Fragkos & Lauri Peterson & Kostas Fragkiadakis - 169-191 Pension funds and fossil fuel phase-out: historical developments and limitations of pension climate strategies
by Clara McDonnell - 193-216 Investment law v. supply-side climate policies: insights from Rockhopper v. Italy and Lone Pine v. Canada
by Alessandra Arcuri & Kyla Tienhaara & Lorenzo Pellegrini - 217-232 “Climate Bailout”: a new tool for central banks to limit the financial risk resulting from climate change
by Matthias Kroll & Kjell Kühne - 233-255 Applying earth system justice to phase out fossil fuels: learning from the injustice of adopting 1.5 °C over 1 °C
by Joyeeta Gupta & Yang Chen & David I. Armstrong Mckay & Paola Fezzigna & Giuliana Gentile & Aljoscha Karg & Luc Vliet & Steven J. Lade & Lisa Jacobson
December 2023, Volume 23, Issue 4
- 397-413 Beyond intergovernmental cooperation: domestic politics of transboundary air pollution in Korea and Singapore
by Annie Young Song - 415-448 Exploring the links between climate transparency and mitigation policy through a reflexive capacity lens: case studies of Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, and Mexico
by Nila Kamil & Sylvia Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen - 449-466 Does ICAO’s climate change mitigation policy based on international agreements reflect global environmental justice?
by Dinar Dewi Kania & Dian Artanti Arubusman & Mustika Sari & Ridho Bramulya Ikhsan & Safathira Zaldin - 467-483 The potential of CO2 emission reduction via replacing cement with recyclable wastes in the construction industry sector: the perspective of Iran’s international commitments
by Mohammad Reza Seyedabadi & Mohsen Karrabi & Abolfazl Mohammadzadeh Moghaddam - 485-502 An analysis of the convention on the protection of the Black Sea against pollution (the Bucharest Convention) from the perspective of Turkish contract law
by Nilay Tulukcu Yıldızbaş & Üstüner Birben & Osman Devrim Elvan & Melek Bilgin Yüce
September 2023, Volume 23, Issue 3
- 221-234 Unanimity or standing aside? Reinterpreting consensus in United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change negotiations
by Katharina Rietig & Christine Peringer & Sarina Theys & Jecel Censoro - 235-252 The treaty management organization established under the UNFCCC and the Paris Agreement: an international actor in its own right?
by Thomas Gehring & Linda Spielmann - 253-269 Country differentiation in the global environmental context: Who is ‘developing’ and according to what?
by Deborah Barros Leal Farias - 271-292 Tempering and enabling ambition: how equity is considered in domestic processes preparing NDCs
by Ceecee Holz & Guy Cunliffe & Kennedy Mbeva & Pieter W. Pauw & Harald Winkler - 293-309 Progression requirements applicable to state action on climate change mitigation under Nationally Determined Contributions
by Benoit Mayer - 311-331 Reality and perfection of China’s addressing climate change legislation in post-Paris Agreement era
by Xiaobin Pan & Bowen Yang - 333-353 How best to incorporate conjunctive water management into international water law: legal amendment, instrument coupling, or new protocol adoption?
by Imad Antoine Ibrahim & Jonathan Lautze - 355-371 A critical assessment of the International Seabed Authority’s implementation of the Common Heritage of Mankind principle from the perspective of benefit-sharing regime
by Hao Shen - 373-393 The green investment principles: from a nodal governance perspective
by Wenting Cheng - 395-396 Correction: The green investment principles: from a nodal governance perspective
by Wenting Cheng
June 2023, Volume 23, Issue 2
- 107-114 Enhancing the achievement of the SDGs: lessons learned at the half-way point of the 2030 Agenda
by Philipp Pattberg & Karin Bäckstrand - 115-121 Inclusive development, leaving no one behind, justice and the sustainable development goals
by Joyeeta Gupta & Courtney Vegelin - 123-132 Changes in the practices and narratives of the United Nations High-Level Political Forum during the COVID-19 pandemic
by Ayṣem Mert & Elise Remling - 133-139 Strengthening the Sustainable Development Goals through integration with human rights
by Magdalena Bexell & Thomas Hickmann & Andrea Schapper - 141-148 Can democracy accelerate sustainability transformations? Policy coherence for participatory co-existence
by Jonathan Pickering - 149-156 The sustainable development goals: governing by goals, targets and indicators
by Graham Long & Jecel Censoro & Katharina Rietig - 157-164 The SDGs as integrating force in global governance? Challenges and opportunities
by Maya Bogers & Frank Biermann & Agni Kalfagianni & Rakhyun E. Kim - 165-171 Multi-stakeholder partnerships for the SDGs: is the “next generation” fit for purpose?
by Oscar Widerberg & Cornelia Fast & Montserrat Koloffon Rosas & Philipp Pattberg - 173-178 Strengthening reflexive governance to achieve the 2030 Agenda and the SDGs
by Casey Stevens - 179-189 Not all risks are equal: a risk governance framework for assessing the water SDG
by Johanna Karolina Louise Koehler - 191-197 The SDGs and fossil fuel subsidy reform
by Harro Asselt - 199-205 Achieving SDG 14 in an equitable and just way
by Bianca Haas - 207-214 Inspiration from the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework for SDG 15
by Ina Lehmann - 215-219 Sustainable development an oxymoron?
by Joshua Philipp Elsässer
March 2023, Volume 23, Issue 1
- 1-25 How does the UNFCCC enable multi-level learning for the governance of adaptation?
by Javier Gonzales-Iwanciw & Sylvia Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen & Art Dewulf - 27-42 It’s not as simple as copy/paste: the EU’s remobilisation of the High Ambition Coalition in international climate governance
by Joseph Earsom - 43-75 The Columbia River Treaty’s adaptive capacity for fish conservation
by Cedar Morton & Murray Rutherford - 77-97 Boundaries of benefit sharing: interpretation and application of substantive rules in the Lake Malawi/Niassa/Nyasa sub-basin of the Zambezi Watercourse
by Joanna Fatch & Alex Bolding & Larry A. Swatuk - 99-101 Edith Brown Weiss: Establishing Norms in a Kaleidoscopic World
by Hermine Coppenolle - 103-103 Retraction Note to: Prospects of legal regulation in the field of electronic waste management in the context of a circular economy
by Gulzhazira Ilyassova & Aigul Nukusheva & Leila Arenova & Guldana Karzhassova & Marzhangul Akimzhanova - 105-105 Retraction Note: Development of corporate investment funds as a tool to achieve the goals of international treaties in the field of climate change
by Maira Bauer & Mariya Bulatenko & Natalia Shimshirt
December 2022, Volume 22, Issue 4
- 639-657 Global climate governance: rising trend of translateral cooperation
by Nataliya Stranadko - 659-672 Designed to be stable: international environmental agreements revisited
by Nahid Masoudi - 673-692 The “top-down” Kyoto Protocol? Exploring caricature and misrepresentation in literature on global climate change governance
by Joanna Depledge - 693-713 Rethinking polycentricity: on the North–South imbalances in transnational climate change governance
by Cille Kaiser - 715-733 Carbon border adjustment: a unilateral solution to the multilateral problem?
by Jeongmeen Suh - 735-759 Credibility dilemmas under the Paris agreement: explaining fossil fuel subsidy reform references in INDCs
by Christian Elliott & Steven Bernstein & Matthew Hoffmann - 761-792 Embracing policy paradoxes: EU’s Just Transition Fund and the aim “to leave no one behind”
by Simo Sarkki & Alice Ludvig & Maria Nijnik & Serhiy Kopiy - 793-824 Europe’s nature governance revolution: harnessing the shadow of heterarchy
by Suzanne Kingston & Zizhen Wang & Edwin Alblas & Mícheál Callaghan & Julie Foulon & Clodagh Daly & Deirdre Norris - 825-842 Biofuelling the energy transition in Nordic countries: explaining overachievement of EU renewable transport obligations
by Jon Birger Skjærseth & Per Ove Eikeland & Tor Håkon Inderberg - 843-843 RETRACTED ARTICLE: Espoo Convention and its role in construction industry as an element of an environmental impact assessment mechanism
by Zhi-Jiang Liu & Ahmad Ghandour & Anastasia Kurilova
September 2022, Volume 22, Issue 3
- 411-437 Consensus decision-making in CCAMLR: Achilles’ heel or fundamental to its success?
by Lynda Goldsworthy - 439-479 An adaptation-mitigation game: does adaptation promote participation in international environmental agreements?
by Miguel Borrero & Santiago J. Rubio - 481-506 Cultivated ties and strategic communication: do international environmental secretariats tailor information to increase their bureaucratic reputation?
by Linda Mederake & Barbara Saerbeck & Alexandra Goritz & Helge Jörgens & Mareike Well & Nina Kolleck - 507-525 Environmental-agreement design and political ideology in democracies
by Tobias Böhmelt - 527-542 Evaluation of the UNFCCC Technology Mechanism’s contribution to an international climate policy framework
by Chaewoon Oh - 543-560 eThekwini’s green and ecological infrastructure policy landscape: research paradigms, theories and epistocrats
by Richard Meissner - 561-576 Population growth, family planning and the Paris Agreement: an assessment of the nationally determined contributions (NDCs)
by Jenna Dodson & Patricia Dérer & Philip Cafaro & Frank Götmark - 577-597 CHANS-Law: preventing the next pandemic through the integration of social and environmental law
by Kirsten Davies & Michelle Lim & Tianbao Qin & Philip Riordan - 599-619 Carbon emission, solid waste management, and electricity generation: a legal and empirical perspective for renewable energy in Nigeria
by Olusola Joshua Olujobi & Daniel E. Ufua & Uchechukwu Emena Okorie & Mercy E. Ogbari - 621-636 International legal aspects of countering environmental terrorism in the context of modern trends in radical environmentalism
by Gulnara Balgimbekova & Roza Zhamiyeva & Abzal Serikbayev & Bulatbek Shnarbayev & Amanbek Mashabayev - 637-637 Retraction Note to: Economic and legal regulation of the use and development of renewable energy sources
by Ali Sabyrzhan & Gulnara Balgimbekova & Viktor Shestak
June 2022, Volume 22, Issue 2
- 229-244 Lessons learnt from international environmental agreements for the Stockholm + 50 Conference: celebrating 20 Years of INEA
by Joyeeta Gupta & Courtney Vegelin & Nicky Pouw - 245-262 The politics of multilateral environmental agreements lessons from 20 years of INEA
by Agni Kalfagianni & Oran R. Young - 263-278 Lessons learnt from two decades of international environmental agreements: law
by Peter H. Sand & Jeffrey McGee - 279-294 Economic analysis of international environmental agreements: lessons learnt 2000–2020
by Nicky R. M. Pouw & Hans-Peter Weikard & Richard B. Howarth - 295-315 20 Years of global climate change governance research: taking stock and moving forward
by Philipp Pattberg & Cille Kaiser & Oscar Widerberg & Johannes Stripple - 317-332 Reflecting on twenty years of international agreements concerning water governance: insights and key learning
by Naho Mirumachi & Margot Hurlbert - 333-352 Lessons learnt in global biodiversity governance
by Matilda Petersson & Peter Stoett - 353-372 Agency dynamics of International Environmental Agreements: actors, contexts, and drivers
by Sylvia Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen & Katharina Rietig & Michelle Scobie - 373-391 Institutional interplay in global environmental governance: lessons learned and future research
by Joshua Philipp Elsässer & Thomas Hickmann & Sikina Jinnah & Sebastian Oberthür & Thijs Graaf - 393-409 Equity, justice and the SDGs: lessons learnt from two decades of INEA scholarship
by Joyeeta Gupta & Aarti Gupta & Courtney Vegelin
March 2022, Volume 22, Issue 1
- 1-25 Understanding international non-state and subnational actors for biodiversity and their possible contributions to the post-2020 CBD global biodiversity framework: insights from six international cooperative initiatives
by Marcel T. J. Kok & Kathrin Ludwig - 27-48 The democratisation of European nature governance 1992–2015: introducing the comparative nature governance index
by Suzanne Kingston & Zizhen Wang & Edwin Alblas & Micheál Callaghan & Julie Foulon & Valesca Lima & Geraldine Murphy - 49-65 Australia’s interaction with Asian countries in the negotiation for an international agreement for the marine biodiversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction
by Sandya Nishanthi Gunasekara & Md Saiful Karim - 67-95 From the circular economy to the sustainable development goals in the European Union: an empirical comparison
by José Miguel Rodríguez-Antón & Luis Rubio-Andrada & María Soledad Celemín-Pedroche & Soraya María Ruíz-Peñalver - 97-118 Domestic and international climate policies: complementarity or disparity?
by Lauri Peterson - 119-138 RETRACTED ARTICLE:Development of corporate investment funds as a tool to achieve the goals of international treaties in the field of climate change
by Maira Bauer & Mariya Bulatenko & Natalia Shimshirt - 139-155 Environmental agreement under the non-interference principle: the case of ASEAN agreement on transboundary haze pollution
by Fikri Muhammad - 157-175 International legal instruments for stimulating green building and construction business: Russian case study
by Zhi-Jiang Liu & Vera Snezhko & Anastasia Kurilova - 177-199 Problems of the effectiveness of the implementation of international agreements in the field of waste management: the study of the experience of Kazakhstan in the context of the applicability of European legal practices
by Roza Zhamiyeva & Gulmira Sultanbekova & Gulnara Balgimbekova & Kuat Mussin & Maral Abzalbekova & Murat Kozhanov - 201-228 Protection of prior and late developers of transboundary water resources in international treaty practices: a review of 416 international water agreements
by Yue Zhao & Xuefei Xiong & Sicheng Wu & Kaixaing Zhang
December 2021, Volume 21, Issue 4
- 553-574 Evolving together: transboundary water governance in the Colorado River Basin
by Mariana Rivera-Torres & Andrea K. Gerlak - 575-594 Modelling and analysing the relationship between innovation and the European Regulations on hazardous waste shipments
by M. Pilar Latorre & Margarita Martinez-Nuñez & Carmen Callao - 595-610 RETRACTED ARTICLE: Economic and legal regulation of the use and development of renewable energy sources
by Ali Sabyrzhan & Gulnara Balgimbekova & Viktor Shestak - 611-630 Environmental education and awareness: the present and future key to the sustainable management of Ramsar convention sites in Kenya
by Parita Shah & George Atisa - 631-646 Assigning a grass-root NGO role to legitimate organizations as resident watch-dogs in negotiating carbon benefits derived from multilateral funding
by Dan-Bi Um - 647-667 International nuclear energy legal regulation: comparing the experience of the EU and the CIS countries
by Aigul Nukusheva & Guldana Karzhassova & Dinara Rustembekova & Tatyana Au & Kulbagila Baikenzhina - 669-690 Ideology and non-state climate action: partnering and design of REDD+ projects
by Benjamin M. Abraham - 691-692 Correction to: Ideology and non‑state climate action: partnering and design of REDD+ projects
by Benjamin M. Abraham - 693-710 China's policy and finding ways to prevent collapse in WEEE processing in the context of the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal
by Qinrun Zhang - 711-728 Evaluating EU responsiveness to the evolution of the international regime complex on climate change
by Joseph Earsom & Tom Delreux - 729-733 Philosophies of Polar Law, Edited by Dawid Bunikowski and Alan D. Hemmings (Routledge Research in Polar Law) 2021 – Book Review by Joseph DiMento
by Joseph DiMento - 735-738 Thijs Van de Graaf and Benjamin K. Sovacool: Global Energy Politics
by Hugo Faber
September 2021, Volume 21, Issue 3
- 347-365 The evolution and challenges in China’s implementation of the Convention on Biological Diversity: a new analytical framework
by Tianbao Qin - 367-388 RETRACTED ARTICLE: Prospects of legal regulation in the field of electronic waste management in the context of a circular economy
by Gulzhazira Ilyassova & Aigul Nukusheva & Leila Arenova & Guldana Karzhassova & Marzhangul Akimzhanova - 389-389 Correction to: Prospects of legal regulation in the field of electronic waste management in the context of a circular economy
by Gulzhazira Ilyassova & Aigul Nukusheva & Leila Arenova & Guldana Karzhassova & Marzhangul Akimzhanova - 391-404 From ‘mad cow’ crisis to synthetic biology: challenges to EU regulation of GMOs beyond the European context
by Artem Anyshchenko & Jennifer Yarnold - 405-425 National political pressure groups and the stability of international environmental agreements
by Achim Hagen & Juan-Carlos Altamirano-Cabrera & Hans-Peter Weikard - 427-444 Examining host-State counterclaims for environmental damage in investor-State dispute settlement from human rights and transnational public policy perspectives
by Ted Gleason - 445-467 Impact assessment of a mandatory operational goal-based short-term measure to reduce GHG emissions from ships: the LDC/SIDS case study
by Harilaos N. Psaraftis & Thalis Zis - 469-491 Response of the Arab world to climate change challenges and the Paris agreement
by Salpie S. Djoundourian - 493-516 A new two-nested-game approach: linking micro- and macro-scales in international environmental agreements
by Tiziano Distefano & Simone D’Alessandro - 517-530 Cost of groundwater protection: major groundwater basin protection zones in Poland
by Ewa Krogulec & Jacek Gurwin & Mirosław Wąsik - 531-551 John Rawls and compliance to climate change agreements: insights from a laboratory experiment
by Klaudijo Klaser & Lorenzo Sacconi & Marco Faillo
June 2021, Volume 21, Issue 2
- 147-163 The risk of carbon leakage in global climate agreements
by Tobias Nielsen & Nicolai Baumert & Astrid Kander & Magnus Jiborn & Viktoras Kulionis - 165-181 European fuel economy policy for new passenger cars: a historical comparative analysis of discourses and change factors
by Takahiro Oki - 183-199 Green building in China
by Yayun Shen & Michael Faure - 201-217 Beyond delegation size: developing country negotiating capacity and NGO ‘support’ in international climate negotiations
by Nicholas Chan - 219-233 Global warming problem faced by the international community: international legal aspect
by Aigul Nukusheva & Gulzhazira Ilyassova & Dinara Rustembekova & Roza Zhamiyeva & Leila Arenova - 235-253 Reciprocity in practice: the hydropolitics of equitable and reasonable utilization in the Lancang-Mekong basin
by Carl Middleton & David J. Devlaeminck - 255-283 Assessment framework of actor strategies in international river basin management, the case of Deltarhine
by Tobias Renner & Sander Meijerink & Pieter Zaag & Toine Smits - 285-303 Hybrid transnational advocacy networks in environmental protection: banning the use of cyanide in European gold mining
by Alexandra-Maria Bocse - 305-321 The effectiveness of the Bern Convention on wildlife legislation and judicial decisions in Turkey
by Osman Devrim Elvan & Üstüner Birben & Hasan Emre Ünal - 323-345 Does capacity increase compliance? Examining evidence from European cooperation against air pollution
by Andreas Kokkvoll Tveit
March 2021, Volume 21, Issue 1
- 1-7 Achieving the ambitious targets of the Paris Agreement: the role of key actors
by S. Andresen & G. Bang & J. B. Skjærseth & A. Underdal - 9-23 China’s climate and energy policy: at a turning point?
by Gørild M. Heggelund - 25-41 Towards a European Green Deal: The evolution of EU climate and energy policy mixes
by Jon Birger Skjærseth - 43-58 The United States: conditions for accelerating decarbonisation in a politically divided country
by Guri Bang - 59-73 The Paris agreement and key actors’ domestic climate policy mixes: comparative patterns
by Jon Birger Skjærseth & Steinar Andresen & Guri Bang & Gørild M. Heggelund - 75-91 Principle of reasonable and legitimate expectations in international law as a premise for investments in the energy sector
by Michał Krzykowski & Michał Mariański & Jakub Zięty - 93-111 Determinants of successful delivery by non-state actors: an exploratory study
by Daniel Puig & Fatemeh Bakhtiari - 113-132 The effectiveness of soft law in international environmental regimes: participation and compliance in the Hyogo Framework for Action
by Maximilian S. T. Wanner - 133-145 Explicit targets and cooperation: regional fisheries management organizations and the sustainable development goals
by Bianca Haas & Marcus Haward & Jeffrey McGee & Aysha Fleming
December 2020, Volume 20, Issue 4
- 597-600 The principle of no significant harm in international water law
by Susanne Schmeier & Joyeeta Gupta - 601-618 The current state of development of the no significant harm principle: How far have we come?
by Owen McIntyre - 619-629 The inter-relationship between no harm, equitable and reasonable utilisation and cooperation under international water law
by Attila M. Tanzi - 631-648 The role of international case law in implementing the obligation not to cause significant harm
by Mara Tignino & Christian Bréthaut - 649-666 The role of international regimes and courts in clarifying prevention of harm in freshwater and marine environmental protection
by Ruby Moynihan & Bjørn-Oliver Magsig - 667-682 The duty to take appropriate measures to prevent significant transboundary harm and private companies: insights from transboundary hydropower projects
by Alistair Rieu-Clarke - 683-698 Prior notification of planned measures: A response to the no-harm dilemma?
by Susanne Schmeier - 699-712 The no significant harm principle and the human right to water
by Otto Spijkers - 713-730 The principle of no significant harm in the Central Asian context
by Dinara Ziganshina & Barbara Janusz-Pawletta - 731-747 Future proofing the principle of no significant harm
by Joyeeta Gupta & Susanne Schmeier
September 2020, Volume 20, Issue 3
- 411-429 Transforming our world? Discursive representation in the negotiations on the Sustainable Development Goals
by Carole-Anne Sénit - 431-458 The Sustainable Development Goals viewed through Gross National Happiness, Ubuntu, and Buen Vivir
by Dorine E. Norren - 459-481 New alliances in global environmental governance: how intergovernmental treaty secretariats interact with non-state actors to address transboundary environmental problems
by Thomas Hickmann & Joshua Philipp Elsässer - 483-506 Moral duties, compliance and polycentric climate governance
by Alexandre Gajevic Sayegh - 507-539 Limits to learning: the struggle to adapt to unintended effects of international payment for environmental services programmes
by Dirk-Jan Koch & Marloes Verholt - 541-557 The function of international business frameworks for governing companies’ climate change-related actions toward the 2050 goals
by Shiro Hori & Sachi Syugyo - 559-575 Contestations over the financial linkages between the UNFCCC’s Technology and Financial Mechanism: using the lens of institutional interaction
by Chaewoon Oh - 577-595 The public administration of territorial seas: Ukrainian case
by Borys Kormych & Tetiana Averochkina & Vitalii Gaverskyi
June 2020, Volume 20, Issue 2
- 197-201 Editorial Access and Allocation in Earth System Governance
by Joyeeta Gupta & Louis Lebel - 203-221 Epistemological and ethical understandings of access and allocation in Earth System Governance: a 10-year review of the literature
by Agni Kalfagianni & Simon Meisch - 223-238 The global economic system and access and allocation in earth system governance
by Defne Gonenc & Dario Piselli & Yixian Sun - 239-254 International aid, trade and investment and access and allocation
by Michelle Scobie - 255-269 What goes around, comes around? Access and allocation problems in Global North–South waste trade
by Benedetta Cotta - 271-286 Access and allocation in climate change adaptation
by Kevin Grecksch & Carola Klöck - 287-301 Climate mitigation policies and actions: access and allocation issues
by Antonina Ivanova & Asim Zia & Paiman Ahmad & Mairon Bastos-Lima - 303-322 Access and allocation: the role of large shareholders and investors in leaving fossil fuels underground
by Joyeeta Gupta & Arthur Rempel & Hebe Verrest - 323-338 Access and allocation in food governance, a decadal view 2008–2018
by Dona Azizi - 339-358 Access and allocation: rights to water, sanitation and hygiene
by Margot Hurlbert - 359-375 Access and allocation in global biodiversity governance: a review
by Brendan Coolsaet & Neil Dawson & Florian Rabitz & Simone Lovera - 377-391 The global governance of water, energy, and food nexus: allocation and access for competing demands
by Pritee Sharma & Salla Nithyanth Kumar - 393-410 Access and allocation in earth system governance: lessons learnt in the context of the Sustainable Development Goals
by Joyeeta Gupta & Louis Lebel
March 2020, Volume 20, Issue 1
- 1-4 Celebrating INEA’s authors and editors
by Joyeeta Gupta - 5-19 Why is it hard to solve environmental problems? The perils of institutional reductionism and institutional overload
by Oran R. Young & Olav Schram Stokke - 21-39 Understanding the limitations of current RFMO climate change adaptation strategies: the case of the IATTC and the Eastern Pacific Ocean
by Brian Pentz & Nicole Klenk - 41-60 Past and future of burden sharing in the climate regime: positions and ambition from a top-down to a bottom-up governance system
by Paula Castro - 61-83 Structural conditions for novelty: the introduction of new environmental clauses to the trade regime complex
by James Hollway & Jean-Frédéric Morin & Joost Pauwelyn - 85-102 How the game changer was generated? An analysis on the legal rules and development of China’s green bond market
by Tao Huang & Qingyue Yue - 103-121 Hydropolitics and issue-linkage along the Orontes River Basin: an analysis of the Lebanon–Syria and Syria–Turkey hydropolitical relations
by Ahmet Conker & Hussam Hussein - 123-140 Asymmetric barriers in atmospheric politics of transboundary air pollution: a case of particulate matter (PM) cooperation between China and South Korea
by Taedong Lee & Wooyeal Paik - 141-159 Policy adoption, legislative developments, and implementation: the resulting global differences among countries in the management of biological resources
by George Atisa - 161-178 The contribution of the right to information laws in Europe to local government transparency on sustainability
by Francisco J. Alcaraz-Quiles & Andrés Navarro-Galera & David Ortiz-Rodríguez - 179-195 The doctrine of liability fixation of state responsibility in the convention on transboundary pollution damage
by Xuyu Hu
December 2019, Volume 19, Issue 6
- 531-532 Farewell editorial
by Courtney Vegelin - 533-556 Negotiating environmental protection in trade agreements: A regime shift or a tactical linkage?
by Noémie Laurens & Jean-Frédéric Morin - 557-575 An economic analysis of international environmental rights
by Jesse L. Reynolds - 577-593 Do unilateral trade measures really catalyze multilateral environmental agreements?
by Juan He - 595-613 Governing complexity: How can the interplay of multilateral environmental agreements be harnessed for effective international market-based climate policy instruments?
by Stephan Hoch & Axel Michaelowa & Aglaja Espelage & Anne-Kathrin Weber - 615-630 Identity and equal treatment in negative externality agreements
by Anna A. Klis