Content
March 2020, Volume 20, Issue 1
- 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 - 631-645 Inducing state compliance with international fisheries law: lessons from two case studies concerning the Republic of Korea’s IUU fishing
by Hyun Jung Kim - 647-650 Correction to: Effects of funding mechanisms on participation in multilateral environmental agreements
by Steffen Mohrenberg & Vally Koubi & Thomas Bernauer
October 2019, Volume 19, Issue 4
- 357-367 Special issue: Exploring global and transnational governance of climate change adaptation
by Åsa Persson & Adis Dzebo - 369-393 Governing borderless climate risks: moving beyond the territorial framing of adaptation
by Magnus Benzie & Åsa Persson - 395-410 Strategic cooperation for transnational adaptation: lessons from the economics of climate change mitigation
by Matteo Roggero & Leonhard Kähler & Achim Hagen - 411-427 Building a regional adaptation strategy for Amazon countries
by Maria Antonia Tigre - 429-446 Does orchestration in the Global Climate Action Agenda effectively prioritize and mobilize transnational climate adaptation action?
by Sander Chan & Wanja Amling - 447-466 Effective governance of transnational adaptation initiatives
by Adis Dzebo - 467-483 Transnational municipal networks: Harbingers of innovation for global adaptation governance?
by Marielle Papin - 485-495 An institutional framework for addressing marine genetic resources under the proposed treaty for marine biodiversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction
by Dire Tladi - 497-513 Market-based mechanism and ‘climate justice’: reframing the debate for a way forward
by Manish Kumar Shrivastava & Saradindu Bhaduri - 515-530 Knowledge-based management of protected areas and hydropower: the case of Norway
by Kristin Rosendal & Jon Birger Skjærseth & Steinar Andresen
June 2019, Volume 19, Issue 3
- 255-272 Incorporating international biodiversity law principles and rights perspective into the European Union Timber Regulation
by Claudia Ituarte-Lima & Amelie Dupraz-Ardiot & Constance L. McDermott - 273-295 Climate change and developing countries: from background actors to protagonists of climate negotiations
by Giorgia Sforna - 297-313 Accountability mechanisms in international climate change financing
by Rishi Basak & Edwin van der Werf - 315-339 Rethinking public and private policies in Europe with the support of a industrial sustainability index
by Roberta Arbolino & Luisa De Simone - 341-355 A national system of biological monitoring in the Russian Arctic as a tool for the implementation of the Stockholm Convention
by Tatiana Yu Sorokina
April 2019, Volume 19, Issue 2
- 145-150 What does UN environment’s GEO-6 mean for INEA?
by Joyeeta Gupta - 151-167 Rich man’s solution? Climate engineering discourses and the marginalization of the Global South
by Frank Biermann & Ina Möller - 169-185 Institutional diffusion for the Minamata Convention on Mercury
by Azusa Uji - 187-205 Mapping the fragmentation of the international forest regime complex: institutional elements, conflicts and synergies
by Carmen Rodríguez Fernández-Blanco & Sarah L. Burns & Lukas Giessen - 207-224 The role of national problems in European air quality regulation: the process of amplification
by Tobias Arnoldussen - 225-251 Sustainability labelling as a tool for reporting the sustainable development impacts of climate actions relevant to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement
by Karen Holm Olsen & Fatemeh Bakhtiari & Virender Kumar Duggal & Jørge Villy Fenhann
February 2019, Volume 19, Issue 1
- 1-18 Effects of funding mechanisms on participation in multilateral environmental agreements
by Steffen Mohrenberg & Vally Koubi & Thomas Bernauer - 19-52 Regional economic regimes and the environment: stronger institutional design is weakening environmental policy capacity of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation
by Pradip Kumar Sarker & Md Saifur Rahman & Lukas Giessen - 53-68 Governing transboundary commons in Africa: the emergence and challenges of the Kavango–Zambezi Treaty
by Amanda Linell & Martin Sjöstedt & Aksel Sundström - 69-87 Explaining European Union effectiveness (goal achievement) in the Convention on Biological Diversity: the importance of diplomatic engagement
by Lisanne Groen - 89-106 The global stocktake: design lessons for a new review and ambition mechanism in the international climate regime
by Manjana Milkoreit & Kate Haapala - 107-122 Can intellectual property rights within climate technology transfer work for the UNFCCC and the Paris Agreement?
by Chen Zhou - 123-144 Brazil and the Paris Agreement: REDD+ as an instrument of Brazil’s Nationally Determined Contribution compliance
by P. Gallo & E. Albrecht
December 2018, Volume 18, Issue 6
- 743-777 Do deep and comprehensive regional trade agreements help in reducing air pollution?
by Inmaculada Martínez-Zarzoso & Walid Oueslati - 779-799 Enabling the IPBES conceptual framework to work across knowledge boundaries
by Ria Dunkley & Susan Baker & Natasha Constant & Angelina Sanderson-Bellamy - 801-810 How are Argentina and Chile facing shared biodiversity loss?
by Cristian Lorenzo & Julián Kelly & Guillermo Martínez Pastur & Fernando Estenssoro Saavedra & María Vanessa Lencinas - 811-838 A critique of the Global Pact for the environment: a stillborn initiative or the foundation for Lex Anthropocenae?
by Louis J. Kotzé & Duncan French - 839-860 The geopolitical overlay of the hydropolitics of the Harirud River Basin
by Mohsen Nagheeby & Jeroen Warner - 861-874 The European Union and the establishment of marine protected areas in Antarctica
by Nengye Liu
October 2018, Volume 18, Issue 5
- 635-656 The rational design of regional regimes: contrasting Amazonian, Central African and Pan-European Forest Governance
by Joana Carlos Bezerra & Jan Sindt & Lukas Giessen - 657-657 Correction to: The rational design of regional regimes: contrasting Amazonian, Central African and Pan-European Forest Governance
by Joana Carlos Bezerra & Jan Sindt & Lukas Giessen - 659-669 The mismatch between the in-country determinants of technology transfer, and the scope of technology transfer initiatives under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
by Daniel Puig & James Arthur Haselip & Fatemeh Bakhtiari - 671-688 Deliberative multi-actor dialogues as opportunities for transformative social learning and conflict resolution in international environmental negotiations
by Maria Schultz & Thomas Hahn & Claudia Ituarte-Lima & Niclas Hällström - 689-706 The erratic behaviour of the EU ETS on the path towards consolidation and price stability
by Federico Galán-Valdivieso & Elena Villar-Rubio & María-Dolores Huete-Morales - 707-722 Enhancing climate resilience of transboundary water allocation agreements: the impact of shortening the agreement’s lifetime on cooperation stability
by Maryam Jafroudi - 723-742 A proposed methodology for assessing the economic needs of safeguard zones protecting groundwater intended for human consumption within the context of the European Water Framework Directive
by A. Jiménez-Madrid & S. Gómez & G. Gémar & C. Martínez
August 2018, Volume 18, Issue 4
- 469-489 The influence of the Regional Coordinating Unit of the Abidjan Convention: implementing multilateral environmental agreements to prevent shipping pollution in West and Central Africa
by Harry Barnes-Dabban & Sylvia Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen - 491-512 Can the management school explain noncompliance with international environmental agreements?
by Andreas Kokkvoll Tveit - 513-528 Regulating the invisible: interaction between the EU and Norway in managing nano-risks
by Steinar Andresen & G. Kristin Rosendal & Jon Birger Skjærseth - 529-539 Current environmental problems in member states of the Eurasian Economic Union
by Elen Akopova & Assiya Nursapa & Ilyas Kuderin - 541-556 Sharing aquatic genetic resources across jurisdictions: playing ‘chicken’ in the sea
by Fran Humphries - 557-572 Experimenting with TripleCOPs: Productive innovation or counterproductive complexity?
by Jen Iris Allan & David Downie & Jessica Templeton - 573-598 Climate change coalition formation and equilibrium strategies in mitigation games in the post-Kyoto Era
by Jing Wu & Jean-Claude Thill - 599-617 Nomination and inscription of the “Ancient Beech Forests of Germany” as natural World Heritage: multi-level governance between science and politics
by Janina Heim & Max Krott & Michael Böcher - 619-634 The revival of the Honourable Merchant? Analysing private forest governance at firm level
by Anne-Kathrin Weber
June 2018, Volume 18, Issue 3
- 315-333 Environmental regime effectiveness and the North American Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement
by Carolyn Johns & Adam Thorn & Debora VanNijnatten - 335-350 A place in the Sun? IRENA’s position in the global energy governance landscape
by Indra Overland & Gunilla Reischl - 351-367 The self-selection of democracies into treaty design: insights from international environmental agreements
by Tobias Böhmelt & Edita Butkutė - 369-389 Youth participation and agency in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
by Harriet Thew - 391-408 Halon management and ozone-depleting substances control in Jordan
by Tareq K. Al-Awad & Motasem N. Saidan & Brian J. Gareau - 409-428 The role of valuation and bargaining in optimising transboundary watercourse treaty regimes
by Rafael Emmanuel Macatangay & Alistair Rieu-Clarke - 429-446 The framing and governance of climate change adaptation projects in Lao PDR and Cambodia
by Louis Lebel & Mira Käkönen & Va Dany & Phimphakan Lebel & Try Thuon & Saykham Voladet - 447-466 Making initiatives resonate: how can non-state initiatives advance national contributions under the UNFCCC?
by Lukas Hermwille - 467-467 Correction to: Multilateral development banking in a fragmented climate finance system: shifting priorities in energy finance at the Asian Development Bank
by Laurence Delina
April 2018, Volume 18, Issue 2
- 153-174 International environmental agreements with agenda and interaction between pollutants
by Jing Xu - 175-198 How empirical uncertainties influence the stability of climate coalitions
by Jasper N. Meya & Ulrike Kornek & Kai Lessmann - 199-213 The Aarhus convention and process cosmopolitanism
by Duncan Weaver - 215-228 Gathering at the AOSIS: perceived cooperation among Pacific Small Island States
by Michael B. Schwebel - 229-253 Geoengineering governance-by-default: an earth system governance perspective
by Anita Talberg & Peter Christoff & Sebastian Thomas & David Karoly - 255-273 Risk-sharing agreements to cover environmental damage: theory and practice
by Jing Liu & Michael Faure - 275-294 The weakness of the strong: re-examining power in transboundary water dynamics
by Jacob D. Petersen-Perlman & Itay Fischhendler - 295-314 Protecting wild land from wind farms in a post-EU Scotland
by Simon Marsden
February 2018, Volume 18, Issue 1
- 1-9 INEA editorial: Achieving 1.5 °C and climate justice
by Kate Dooley & Joyeeta Gupta & Anand Patwardhan - 11-28 Achieving the 1.5 °C objective: just implementation through a right to (sustainable) development approach
by Joyeeta Gupta & Karin Arts - 29-43 In the light of equity and science: scientific expertise and climate justice after Paris
by Bård Lahn - 45-61 Evoking equity as a rationale for solar geoengineering research? Scrutinizing emerging expert visions of equity
by Jane A. Flegal & Aarti Gupta - 63-77 Geoengineering: neither economical, nor ethical—a risk–reward nexus analysis of carbon dioxide removal
by Turaj S. Faran & Lennart Olsson - 79-98 Land-based negative emissions: risks for climate mitigation and impacts on sustainable development
by Kate Dooley & Sivan Kartha - 99-115 Countries start to explain how their climate contributions are fair: more rigour needed
by Harald Winkler & Niklas Höhne & Guy Cunliffe & Takeshi Kuramochi & Amanda April & Maria Jose Villafranca Casas - 117-134 Fairly sharing 1.5: national fair shares of a 1.5 °C-compliant global mitigation effort
by Ceecee Holz & Sivan Kartha & Tom Athanasiou - 135-152 Exploring national and regional orchestration of non-state action for a
by Sander Chan & Paula Ellinger & Oscar Widerberg
December 2017, Volume 17, Issue 6
- 755-778 Trade and sustainability: the impact of the International Tropical Timber Agreements on exports
by Kendall Houghton & Helen Naughton - 779-794 Compliance with climate change agreements: the constraints of consumption
by Paul G. Harris & Taedong Lee - 795-814 Dynamic political contexts and power asymmetries: the cases of the Blue Nile and the Yarmouk Rivers
by Hussam Hussein & Mattia Grandi - 815-837 Economic analysis of e-waste market
by Prudence Dato - 839-854 The World Heritage Convention and Tasmania’s tall-eucalypt forests: can an international treaty on environmental protection transcend the vicissitudes of domestic politics?
by Geoff Law & Lorne Kriwoken - 855-882 The climate rent curse: new challenges for burden sharing
by Ulrike Kornek & Jan Christoph Steckel & Kai Lessmann & Ottmar Edenhofer - 883-898 Restricted linking of emissions trading systems: options, benefits, and challenges
by Lambert Schneider & Michael Lazarus & Carrie Lee & Harro van Asselt - 899-919 Regional clustering of chemicals and waste multilateral environmental agreements to improve enforcement
by Ning Liu & Carl Middleton
October 2017, Volume 17, Issue 5
- 607-621 The implementation of the Nagoya ABS Protocol for the research sector: experience and challenges
by Gurdial Singh Nijar & Sélim Louafi & Eric W. Welch - 623-638 A historical institutionalist view on merging LULUCF and REDD+ in a post-2020 climate agreement
by Till Pistorius & Sabine Reinecke & Astrid Carrapatoso - 639-654 Transaction costs in the evolution of transnational polycentric governance
by Caleb Gallemore - 655-676 Governing by targets: reductio ad unum and evolution of the two-degree climate target
by Piero Morseletto & Frank Biermann & Philipp Pattberg - 677-694 Diplomatic water cooperation: the case of Sino-India dispute over Brahmaputra
by Lei Xie & Shaofeng Jia - 695-708 Legitimacy in REDD+ governance in Indonesia
by Adelaide Glover & Heike Schroeder - 709-729 Nash bargaining solutions for international climate agreements under different sets of bargaining weights
by S. Yu & E. C. Ierland & H.-P. Weikard & X. Zhu - 731-754 International Environmental Agreements for biodiversity conservation: a game-theoretic analysis
by Irene Alvarado-Quesada & Hans-Peter Weikard
August 2017, Volume 17, Issue 4
- 445-461 The European Union as a global climate leader: confronting aspiration with evidence
by Charles F. Parker & Christer Karlsson - 463-482 Exploring the agency of Africa in climate change negotiations: the case of REDD+
by Joanes Odiwuor Atela & Claire Hellen Quinn & Albert A. Arhin & Lalisa Duguma & Kennedy Liti Mbeva - 483-500 Governing by expertise: the contested politics of (accounting for) land-based mitigation in a new climate agreement
by Kate Dooley & Aarti Gupta - 501-529 State power and diffusion processes in the ratification of global environmental treaties, 1981–2008
by Yoshiki Yamagata & Jue Yang & Joseph Galaskiewicz - 531-552 Informed consent utilizing satellite imagery in forestry carbon trading with North Korea
by Dan-Bi Um & Jung-Sup Um - 553-571 Small and smart: the role of Switzerland in the Cartagena and Nagoya protocols negotiations
by Tobias Schulz & Marc Hufty & Maurice Tschopp - 573-588 Blocking change: facing the drag of status quo fisheries institutions
by Mark Axelrod - 589-606 The Sustainable Development Goals and REDD+: assessing institutional interactions and the pursuit of synergies
by Mairon G. Bastos Lima & Gabrielle Kissinger & Ingrid J. Visseren-Hamakers & Josefina Braña-Varela & Aarti Gupta
June 2017, Volume 17, Issue 3
- 313-326 Introduction to the special issue: energy subsidies at the intersection of climate, energy, and trade governance
by Thijs Van de Graaf & Harro van Asselt - 327-340 Removing fuel subsidies: How can international organizations support national policy reforms?
by Joel E. Smith & Johannes Urpelainen - 341-353 The devil lies in the definition: competing approaches to fossil fuel subsidies at the IMF and the OECD
by Jakob Skovgaard - 355-355 Erratum to: The devil lies in the definition: competing approaches to fossil fuel subsidies at the IMF and the OECD
by Jakob Skovgaard - 357-370 Seizing the opportunity: tackling fossil fuel subsidies under the UNFCCC
by Harro van Asselt & Kati Kulovesi - 371-390 Energy transitions and trade law: lessons from the reform of fisheries subsidies
by Margaret A. Young - 391-410 Explaining energy disputes at the World Trade Organization
by Timothy Meyer - 411-425 No iceberg in sight: on the absence of WTO disputes challenging fossil fuel subsidies
by Dirk Bièvre & Ilaria Espa & Arlo Poletti - 427-443 Market definition as value reconciliation: the case of renewable energy promotion under the WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
by Harri Kalimo & Filip Sedefov & Max S. Jansson
April 2017, Volume 17, Issue 2
- 229-246 Cities to the rescue? Assessing the performance of transnational municipal networks in global climate governance
by Jennifer S. Bansard & Philipp H. Pattberg & Oscar Widerberg - 247-269 The growing influence of the UNFCCC Secretariat on the clean development mechanism
by Katharina Michaelowa & Axel Michaelowa - 271-294 Transboundary water interaction III: contest and compliance
by Mark Zeitoun & Ana Elisa Cascão & Jeroen Warner & Naho Mirumachi & Nathanial Matthews & Filippo Menga & Rebecca Farnum - 295-311 The influential role of consensual knowledge in international environmental agreements: negotiating the implementing measures of the Mediterranean Land-Based Sources Protocol (1980)
by Alexandros Kailis
February 2017, Volume 17, Issue 1
- 1-16 Special issue: managing fragmentation and complexity in the emerging system of international climate finance
by Jonathan Pickering & Carola Betzold & Jakob Skovgaard - 17-36 Allocation of aid for adaptation to climate change: Do vulnerable countries receive more support?
by Carola Betzold & Florian Weiler - 37-53 What is adaptation to climate change? Epistemic ambiguity in the climate finance system
by Nina Hall - 55-71 Mobilising private adaptation finance: developed country perspectives
by W. Pieter Pauw - 73-88 Multilateral development banking in a fragmented climate system: shifting priorities in energy finance at the Asian Development Bank
by Laurence Delina - 89-106 Limiting costs or correcting market failures? Finance ministries and frame alignment in UN climate finance negotiations
by Jakob Skovgaard - 107-125 What drives national support for multilateral climate finance? International and domestic influences on Australia’s shifting stance
by Jonathan Pickering & Paul Mitchell - 127-127 Erratum to: What drives national support for multilateral climate finance? International and domestic influences on Australia’s shifting stance
by Jonathan Pickering & Paul Mitchell - 129-137 Postface: fragmentation, failing trust and enduring tensions over what counts as climate finance
by J. Timmons Roberts & Romain Weikmans - 139-141 J Barry: The politics of actually existing unsustainability: human flourishing in a climate changed, carbon-constrained world
by Susan Conlon
December 2016, Volume 16, Issue 6
- 781-795 The power of presidency in UN climate change negotiations: comparison between Denmark and Mexico
by Siwon Park - 797-813 Governance criteria for effective transboundary biodiversity conservation
by Michelle Lim - 815-831 Do hydrologic rigor and technological advance tell us more or less about transboundary water management?
by Mark Giordano & Diana Suhardiman & Jacob Peterson-Perlman - 833-848 Critical legal and environmental view on the Ramsar Convention in protection from invasive plant species: an example of the Southern Pannonia region
by Vera Batanjski & Ana Batrićević & Dragica Purger & Antun Alegro & Slobodan Jovanović & Vladan Joldžić - 849-871 Global governance principles for the sustainable development of groundwater resources
by Kirstin I. Conti & Joyeeta Gupta - 873-907 Tributary-level transboundary water law in the Syr Darya: overlooked stories of practical water cooperation
by Bunyod Holmatov & Jonathan Lautze & Jusipbek Kazbekov - 909-932 Side-payments: an effective instrument for building climate clubs?
by Håkon Sælen - 933-951 “Monetary” rules for a linked system of offset credits
by Kamleshan Pillay & Jorge E. Viñuales
June 2016, Volume 16, Issue 3
- 375-392 The EU 40 % greenhouse gas emission reduction target by 2030 in perspective
by A. F. Hof & M. G. J. Elzen & A. Mendoza Beltran - 393-396 The transformative potential of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
by Casey Stevens & Norichika Kanie - 397-413 Breaking the mold: a new type of multilateral sustainable development negotiation
by Pamela S. Chasek & Lynn M. Wagner - 415-432 Crowdsourcing global governance: sustainable development goals, civil society, and the pursuit of democratic legitimacy
by Joshua C. Gellers - 433-448 Sustainable development goals and inclusive development
by Joyeeta Gupta & Courtney Vegelin - 449-464 Cross-sectoral strategies in global sustainability governance: towards a nexus approach
by Ingrid Boas & Frank Biermann & Norichika Kanie
February 2016, Volume 16, Issue 1
- 1-20 Implementation of the Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management in Cambodia: effects of regime design
by Linn Persson & Åsa Persson & Chanthy Sam - 21-48 Theorising complex water governance in Africa: the case of the proposed Epupa Dam on the Kunene River
by Richard Meissner & Inga Jacobs - 49-65 The 2 °C target: a European norm enters the international stage—following the process to adoption in China
by Olivia Gippner - 67-89 The interaction of international institutions from a social network perspective
by Tobias Böhmelt & Gabriele Spilker - 91-108 Africa in the global climate change negotiations
by Charles Roger & Satishkumar Belliethathan - 109-126 The roles of non-state actors in climate change governance: understanding agency through governance profiles
by Naghmeh Nasiritousi & Mattias Hjerpe & Björn-Ola Linnér - 127-144 Open or closed meetings? Explaining nonstate actor involvement in the international climate change negotiations
by Naghmeh Nasiritousi & Björn-Ola Linnér - 145-159 The political feasibility of potent enforcement in a post-Kyoto climate agreement
by Stine Aakre - 161-164 Ed Couzens: Whales and elephants in international conservation law and politics: a comparative study
by Peter Sand
November 2015, Volume 15, Issue 4
- 341-342 A Tribute to Pier Vellinga
by Joyeeta Gupta - 343-351 Cancun’s paradigm shift and COP 21: to go beyond rhetoric
by Jean-Charles Hourcade & P.-R. Shukla - 353-367 Climate policy architecture for the Cancun paradigm shift: building on the lessons from history
by Jean-Charles Hourcade & P.-R. Shukla & Christophe Cassen - 369-385 Reconsidering development by reflecting on climate change
by Harald Winkler & Anya Boyd & Marta Torres Gunfaus & Stefan Raubenheimer - 387-402 Equity, burden sharing and development pathways: reframing international climate negotiations
by Aurélie Méjean & Franck Lecocq & Yacob Mulugetta - 403-420 Financing transition in an adverse context: climate finance beyond carbon finance
by Michel Aglietta & Jean-Charles Hourcade & Carlo Jaeger & Baptiste Fabert - 421-430 The challenges of the post-COP21 regime: interpreting CBDR in the INDC context
by Zou Ji & Fu Sha - 431-432 Joyeeta Gupta: The history of global climate governance
by Steinar Andresen
September 2015, Volume 15, Issue 3
- 241-243 Editorial
by Itay Fischhendler - 245-255 The securitization of water discourse: theoretical foundations, research gaps and objectives of the special issue
by Itay Fischhendler - 257-272 ‘Ways of knowing’ water: integrated water resources management and water security as complementary discourses
by Andrea Gerlak & Farhad Mukhtarov - 273-292 Drought and exceptional laws in Spain: the official water discourse
by Julia Urquijo & Lucia De Stefano & Abel La Calle - 293-307 Securitizing Water, Climate, and Migration in Israel, Jordan, and Syria
by Erika Weinthal & Neda Zawahri & Jeannie Sowers - 309-326 Beyond water security: asecuritisation and identity in Cyprus
by Dimitrios Zikos & Alevgul Sorman & Marisa Lau - 327-340 Desecuritisation of water and the technocratic turn in peacebuilding
by Karin Aggestam
May 2015, Volume 15, Issue 2
- 79-104 Democracy and state environmental commitment to international environmental treaties
by Joel Carbonell & Juliann Allison - 105-123 Information flows and social capital through linkages: the effectiveness of the CLRTAP network
by Tobias Böhmelt & Jürg Vollenweider - 125-140 The position of the Low Carbon Growth Partnership (LCGP): at the end of Japan’s navigation between the Kyoto Protocol and the APP
by Chaewoon Oh & Shunji Matsuoka - 141-158 The Basel Convention, US politics, and the emergence of non-state e-waste recycling certification
by Stefan Renckens - 159-177 The International Renewable Energy Agency: a success story in institutional innovation?
by Johannes Urpelainen & Thijs Van de Graaf - 179-197 Comparative typological study of change in global environmental regimes
by Kenji Kamigawara - 199-216 Mandatory labelling of genetically modified (GM) foods
by Zinatul Zainol & Rohaida Nordin & Frank Akpoviri - 217-236 The blending of discourses in Sweden’s “urge to go ahead” in climate politics
by Mathias Zannakis - 237-239 The human rights to water and sanitation in courts worldwide: a selection of national, regional, and international case law, WaterLex, 2014, ISBN: 978-2-940526-00-0
by Pedi Obani
November 2014, Volume 14, Issue 4
- 303-327 Measuring the autonomous influence of an international bureaucracy: the Division for Sustainable Development
by Oscar Widerberg & Frank Laerhoven - 329-348 Authority in Arctic governance: changing spheres of authority in Greenlandic offshore oil and gas developments
by Coco Smits & Jan Tatenhove & Judith Leeuwen - 349-370 Women’s representation in the UN climate change negotiations: a quantitative analysis of state delegations, 1995–2011
by Johannes Kruse - 371-389 Reinforcement of multilevel governance dynamics: creating momentum for increasing ambitions in international climate negotiations
by Katharina Rietig - 391-405 Ecosystem-based approaches to climate change adaptation: progress and challenges
by Joanne Chong
September 2014, Volume 14, Issue 3
- 203-224 Implementing the principle of policy integration: institutional interplay and the role of international organizations
by Avidan Kent - 225-244 Hybrid governance mechanisms as political instruments: the case of sustainability partnerships
by Ayşem Mert - 245-264 A review of the evolution and state of transboundary freshwater treaties
by Mark Giordano & Alena Drieschova & James Duncan & Yoshiko Sayama & Lucia De Stefano & Aaron Wolf - 265-280 The role of discourses in governing forests to combat climate change
by Tobias Nielsen - 281-297 Small island developing states and international climate change negotiations: the power of moral “leadership”
by Inés Águeda Corneloup & Arthur Mol - 299-302 Book reviews
by Joseph DiMento
May 2014, Volume 14, Issue 2
- 101-120 Equity and cost-effectiveness of multilateral adaptation finance: are they friends or foes?
by Martin Stadelmann & Åsa Persson & Izabela Ratajczak-Juszko & Axel Michaelowa - 121-123 Response to “Equity and cost-effectiveness of multilateral adaptation finance: are they friends or foes?” In International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics—Stadelmann et al. (2013)
by Marcia Levaggi - 125-127 Answer of the authors to the response of the Adaptation Fund Board Secretariat to the article
by Martin Stadelmann & Åsa Persson & Izabela Ratajczak-Juszko & Axel Michaelowa - 129-146 International and intranational equity in sharing climate change mitigation burdens
by Narasimha Rao - 147-162 Messages from a middle power: participation by the Republic of Korea in regional environmental cooperation on transboundary air pollution issues
by Inkyoung Kim - 163-179 Priority goals in international co-operation of the Republic of Serbia in the field of environment and sustainable development
by Dragoljub Todić & Duško Dimitrijević - 181-198 Policy coherence and interplay between Zambia’s forest, energy, agricultural and climate change policies and multilateral environmental agreements
by Felix Kalaba & Claire Quinn & Andrew Dougill