Content
November 2022, Volume 22, Issue 9-10
- 1186-1198 Human rights and the Warsaw International Mechanism: an interdisciplinary approach to overcome a financial gridlock
by Erich de Castro Dias & Sofia Larriera Santurio - 1199-1212 Evaluating progress on loss and damage: an assessment of the Executive Committee of the Warsaw International Mechanism under the UNFCCC
by Angelica Johansson & Elisa Calliari & Noah Walker-Crawford & Friederike Hartz & Colin McQuistan & Lisa Vanhala - 1213-1224 Climate justice for small island developing states: identifying appropriate international financing mechanisms for loss and damage
by Matthew Lai & Stacy-ann Robinson & Emmanuel Salas & William Thao & Anna Shorb - 1225-1240 The green climate fund and its shortcomings in local delivery of adaptation finance
by Jessica Omukuti & Sam Barrett & Piran C. L. White & Robert Marchant & Alina Averchenkova - 1241-1251 Post-2025 climate finance target: how much more and how much better?
by W. P. Pauw & U. Moslener & L. H. Zamarioli & N. Amerasinghe & J. Atela & J. P. B. Affana & B. Buchner & R. J. T. Klein & K. L. Mbeva & J. Puri & J. T. Roberts & Z. Shawoo & C. Watson & R. Weikmans - 1252-1265 The green transition in emerging economies: green bond issuance in Brazil and China
by Juliana Lima de Deus & Marco Crocco & Fernanda Faria Silva - 1266-1280 Country ownership in climate finance coordination: a comparative assessment of Kenya and Zambia
by Zoha Shawoo & Adis Dzebo & Mikkel Funder & Kendra Dupuy - 1281-1289 Implementing nationally determined contributions under the Paris agreement: an assessment of climate finance in Caribbean small island developing states
by Preeya S. Mohan - 1290-1305 Transformational adaptation and country ownership: competing priorities in international adaptation finance
by Laura Kuhl & Jamie Shinn - 1306-1318 Implications of the consumption-based accounting for future national emissions budgets
by Xunzhang Pan & Hailin Wang & Xiuqing Lu & Xinzhu Zheng & Lining Wang & Wenying Chen - 1319-1332 Snapshot of the Carbon Dioxide Removal certification and standards ecosystem (2021–2022)
by Stephanie Arcusa & Starry Sprenkle-Hyppolite - 1333-1342 An authenticated and secure accounting system for international emissions trading
by Chenxing Li & Yang Yu & Andrew Chi-Chih Yao & Da Zhang & Xiliang Zhang - 1343-1355 Towards net zero: making baselines for international carbon markets dynamic by applying ‘ambition coefficients’
by Axel Michaelowa & Katharina Michaelowa & Lukas Hermwille & Aglaja Espelage - 1356-1362 Fossil Free Zones: a proposal
by Fergus Green
September 2022, Volume 22, Issue 8
- 961-975 Does climate advocacy matter? The importance of competing interest groups for national climate policies
by Heike Böhler & Marcel Hanegraaff & Kai Schulze - 976-992 Social Engagement with climate change: principles for effective visual representation on social media
by Bienvenido León & Samuel Negredo & María Carmen Erviti - 993-999 Addressing Biases that impact homeowners’ adoption of solar panels
by Howard Kunreuther & Anna Polise & Quinlyn Spellmeyer - 1000-1015 Balancing cost and justice concerns in the energy transition: comparing coal phase-out policies in Germany and the UK
by Guri Bang & Knut Einar Rosendahl & Christoph Böhringer - 1016-1032 Whose jobs face transition risk in Alberta? Understanding sectoral employment precarity in an oil-rich Canadian province
by Antonina Scheer & Moritz Schwarz & Debbie Hopkins & Ben Caldecott - 1033-1049 Just Transition: A whole-systems approach to decarbonisation
by Simone Abram & Ed Atkins & Alix Dietzel & Kirsten Jenkins & Lorna Kiamba & Joshua Kirshner & Julia Kreienkamp & Karen Parkhill & Tom Pegram & Lara M. Santos Ayllón - 1050-1068 Who pays for BECCS and DACCS in the UK: designing equitable climate policy
by Anne Owen & Josh Burke & Esin Serin - 1069-1083 Did Germany reach its 2020 climate targets thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic?
by Shivenes Shammugam & Joachim Schleich & Barbara Schlomann & Lorenzo Montrone - 1084-1096 Multi-scale politics in climate change: the mismatch of authority and capability in federalizing Nepal
by Dil B. Khatri & Andrea J. Nightingale & Hemant Ojha & Gyanu Maskey & Pema Norbu Lama ‘Tsumpa’
August 2022, Volume 22, Issue 7
- 823-833 Impact on the power mix and economy of Japan under a 2050 carbon-neutral scenario: Analysis using the E3ME macro-econometric model
by Soocheol Lee & Yanmin He & Sunhee Suk & Toru Morotomi & Unnada Chewpreecha - 834-850 Factors promoting business strategies, activities, and long-term commitment for climate change mitigation: a survey of Japanese enterprises
by Shiro Hori & Daisuke Nogata & Yuriko Hayabuchi & Kayoko Kondo - 851-864 A real options approach to assessing the cost savings potential of renewable energy adoption among SMEs in Ghana
by Charles Gyamfi Ofori & Anthony Q. Q. Aboagye & Anthony Afful-Dadzie & Godfred Alufar Bokpin - 865-881 The market for electric vehicles in China: modelling the abolition of policy incentives
by Jianjun Wang & Ran Wang & Li Li & Jia Dong - 882-896 Scenarios for mitigating CO2 emissions from energy supply in the absence of CO2 removal
by Mark Diesendorf - 897-905 Pricing carbon effectively: a pathway for higher climate change ambition
by Goran Dominioni - 906-917 Assessing barriers to the internationalization of China’s certified emission reductions (CCERs): a Delphi survey
by Qianqian Wei & Sirui Xiao - 918-934 Evaluating regional carbon emissions trading in China: effects, pathways, co-benefits, spillovers, and prospects
by Junming Zhu & Zhangming Ge & Jiali Wang & Xiao Li & Can Wang - 935-949 Economic and GHG impacts of a US state-level carbon tax: the case of Hawai‘i
by Makena Coffman & Paul Bernstein & Maja Schjervheim & Sumner La Croix & Sherilyn Hayashida - 950-960 A right to pollute versus a duty to mitigate: on the basis of emissions trading and carbon markets
by Sarah Isabel Espinosa-Flor
July 2022, Volume 22, Issue 6
- 695-710 Getting models and modellers to inform deep decarbonization strategies
by Franck Lecocq & Alain Nadaï & Christophe Cassen - 711-727 Understanding pledge and review: learning from analogies to the Paris Agreement review mechanisms
by Kilian Raiser & Başak Çalı & Christian Flachsland - 728-742 Evaluating the enhancement of the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) of developing countries: an international support programme perspective
by Nishchay Mehrotra & Emmanuel Olatunbosun Benjamin - 743-753 If money talks, what is the banking industry saying about climate change?
by Jasmine Elliott & Åsa Löfgren - 754-769 The policy coordinator role of national development banks in scaling climate finance: Evidence from the renewable energy sector
by Fang Zhang - 770-787 Climate change and central banks: what role for monetary policy?
by Lena Boneva & Gianluigi Ferrucci & Francesco Paolo Mongelli - 788-797 Financing the transformation: a proposal for a credit scheme to finance the Paris Agreement
by Ottmar Edenhofer & Christian Klein & Kai Lessmann & Marco Wilkens - 798-816 Definitions and accounting of climate finance: between divergence and constructive ambiguity
by Igor Shishlov & Philipp Censkowsky - 817-822 Overcoming misleading carbon footprints in the financial sector
by Artjom Janssen & Wouter Botzen & Justin Dijk & Patty Duijm
April 2022, Volume 22, Issue 4
- 411-426 Smallholder farmers’ engagement with climate smart agriculture in Africa: role of local knowledge and upscaling
by Ayorinde Ogunyiola & Maaz Gardezi & Sumit Vij - 427-444 Assessment of agricultural emissions, climate change mitigation and adaptation practices in Ethiopia
by Diana Feliciano & John Recha & Gebermedihin Ambaw & Kirsten MacSween & Dawit Solomon & Eva Wollenberg - 445-463 Costs and effectiveness of climate change adaptation in agriculture: a systematic review from the NENA region
by Daniel El Chami & Antonio Trabucco & Theresa Wong & Mohamed Abdel Monem & Valentina Mereu - 464-479 Farmers’ adaptations strategies towards soil salinity effects in agriculture: the interior coast of Bangladesh
by Mohummed Shofi Ullah Mazumder & Muhammad Humayun Kabir - 480-487 Climate clubs: politically feasible and desirable?
by Robert Falkner & Naghmeh Nasiritousi & Gunilla Reischl - 488-501 Will the regime ever break? Assessing socio-political and economic pressures to climate action and European oil majors’ response (2005-2019)
by Leticia Canal Vieira & Mariolina Longo & Matteo Mura - 502-513 Is border carbon adjustment the right tool for the power sector?
by Zsuzsanna Pató & András Mezősi & László Szabó - 514-533 Toward Indigenous visions of nature-based solutions: an exploration into Canadian federal climate policy
by Graeme Reed & Nicolas D. Brunet & Deborah McGregor & Curtis Scurr & Tonio Sadik & Jamie Lavigne & Sheri Longboat - 534-548 Disaster risk reduction and climate policy implementation challenges in Canada and Australia
by Jonathan Raikes & Timothy F. Smith & Claudia Baldwin & Daniel Henstra
March 2022, Volume 22, Issue 3
- 273-284 The role of knowledge maps in sub-national climate change policymaking and governance
by Carlos Rodríguez-García & Adela García-Pintos & Gloria Caballero & Xose H. Vázquez - 285-300 Linking solar geoengineering and emissions reductions: strategically resolving an international climate change policy dilemma
by Jesse L. Reynolds - 301-309 The urgent case for stronger climate targets for international shipping
by Simon Bullock & James Mason & Alice Larkin - 310-319 Tack to the future: is wind propulsion an ecomodernist or degrowth way to decarbonise maritime cargo transport?
by Christiaan De Beukelaer - 320-338 Industrial clustering as a barrier and an enabler for deep emission reduction: a case study of a Dutch chemical cluster
by Zahra Janipour & Vincent de Gooyert & Mark Huijbregts & Heleen de Coninck - 339-355 Central bank collateral as a green monetary policy instrument
by Andrew McConnell & Boyan Yanovski & Kai Lessmann - 356-370 Taming the Green Swan: a criteria-based analysis to improve the understanding of climate-related financial risk assessment tools
by Julia Anna Bingler & Chiara Colesanti Senni - 371-388 Climate risk and IMF surveillance policy: a baseline analysis
by Luma Ramos & Kevin P. Gallagher & Corinne Stephenson & Irene Monasterolo - 389-400 Banks’ climate commitments and credit to carbon-intensive industries: new evidence for France
by Jean-Stéphane Mésonnier - 401-410 National climate funds: a new dataset on national financing vehicles for climate change
by Rishikesh Ram Bhandary
February 2022, Volume 22, Issue 2
- 147-157 Glass half full or glass half empty?: the 2021 Glasgow Climate Conference
by Joanna Depledge & Miguel Saldivia & Cristina Peñasco - 158-174 Twenty years of climate policy: G20 coverage and gaps
by Leonardo Nascimento & Takeshi Kuramochi & Gabriela Iacobuta & Michel den Elzen & Hanna Fekete & Marie Weishaupt & Heleen Laura van Soest & Mark Roelfsema & Gustavo De Vivero-Serrano & Swithin Lui & Frederic Hans & Maria Jose de Villafranca Casas & Niklas Höhne - 175-183 Loss and damage in the global stocktake
by Daniel Puig - 184-197 The ‘national turn’ in climate change loss and damage governance research: constructing the L&D policy landscape in Tuvalu
by Elisa Calliari & Lisa Vanhala - 198-207 Measuring comprehensive carbon prices of national climate policies
by Mark Carhart & Bob Litterman & Clayton Munnings & Olivia Vitali - 208-221 Averaging or multi-year accounting? Environmental integrity implications for using international carbon markets in the context of single-year targets
by Anne Siemons & Lambert Schneider - 222-235 Has the international climate regime promoted climate justice? Evidence from Clean Development Mechanism projects in China
by Jingyuan Xu & Yue Zhang - 236-247 How green primary iron production in South Africa could help global decarbonization
by Hilton Trollip & Bryce McCall & Chris Bataille - 248-253 Climate and trade policies: from silos to integration
by Noémie Laurens & Clara Brandi & Jean-Frédéric Morin - 254-271 A new way forward for ocean-climate policy as reflected in the UNFCCC Ocean and Climate Change Dialogue submissions
by Bobbi-Jo Dobush & Natalya D. Gallo & Melania Guerra & Bleuenn Guilloux & Elisabeth Holland & Sarah Seabrook & Lisa A. Levin
January 2022, Volume 22, Issue 1
- 1-17 Countries with sustained greenhouse gas emissions reductions: an analysis of trends and progress by sector
by William F. Lamb & Michael Grubb & Francesca Diluiso & Jan C. Minx - 18-29 Assessing the rapidly-emerging landscape of net zero targets
by Thomas Hale & Stephen M. Smith & Richard Black & Kate Cullen & Byron Fay & John Lang & Saba Mahmood - 30-47 Scenarios for different ‘Future Indias’: sharpening energy and climate modelling tools
by Thomas Spencer & Navroz K. Dubash - 48-63 Economic and social effectiveness of carbon pricing schemes to meet Brazilian NDC targets
by William Wills & Emilio Lebre La Rovere & Carolina Grottera & Giovanna Ferrazzo Naspolini & Gaëlle Le Treut & Frédéric Ghersi & Julien Lefèvre & Carolina Burle Schmidt Dubeux - 64-76 Do CO2 emissions trading schemes deliver co-benefits? Evidence from Shanghai
by Jie-Sheng Tan-Soo & Lili Li & Ping Qin & Xiao-bing Zhang - 77-96 A global assessment of policy tools to support climate adaptation
by Nicola Ulibarri & Idowu Ajibade & Eranga K. Galappaththi & Elphin Tom Joe & Alexandra Lesnikowski & Katharine J. Mach & Justice Issah Musah-Surugu & Gabriela Nagle Alverio & Alcade C. Segnon & A.R. Siders & Garry Sotnik & Donovan Campbell & Vasiliki I. Chalastani & Kripa Jagannathan & Vhalinavho Khavhagali & Diana Reckien & Yuanyuan Shang & Chandni Singh & Zinta Zommers - 97-111 Policy attention to climate change impacts, adaptation and vulnerability: a global assessment of National Communications (1994–2019)
by Robbert Biesbroek & Sarah Judith Wright & Stefanie Korswagen Eguren & Anita Bonotto & Ioannis N. Athanasiadis - 112-131 Farmers’ preferences and willingness to pay for climate-smart agricultural technologies on rice production in Nigeria
by Ifeoma Q. Anugwa & Elizabeth A. Onwubuya & Jane M. Chah & Chisom C. Abonyi & Eleanya K. Nduka - 132-146 A systematic review of Nepalese farmers’ climate change adaptation strategies
by Sushila Rijal & Popular Gentle & Uttam Khanal & Clevo Wilson & Bhagawat Rimal
November 2021, Volume 21, Issue 10
- 1249-1256 COVID-19 recovery and climate policy
by Jan Corfee-Morlot & Joanna Depledge & Harald Winkler - 1257-1271 Modelling the economic effects of COVID-19 and possible green recovery plans: a post-Keynesian approach
by Hector Pollitt & Richard Lewney & Bence Kiss-Dobronyi & Xinru Lin - 1272-1280 Carbon pricing and COVID-19
by Kian Mintz-Woo & Francis Dennig & Hongxun Liu & Thomas Schinko - 1281-1297 Acceptance of climate-oriented policy measures under the COVID-19 crisis: an empirical analysis for Germany
by Daniel Engler & Elke D. Groh & Gunnar Gutsche & Andreas Ziegler - 1298-1306 Harnessing international climate governance to drive a sustainable recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic
by Wolfgang Obergassel & Lukas Hermwille & Sebastian Oberthür - 1307-1317 Climate justice: priorities for equitable recovery from the pandemic
by Sennan D. Mattar & Tahseen Jafry & Patrick Schröder & Zarina Ahmad - 1318-1327 Climate solutions to meet the suburban surge: leveraging COVID-19 recovery to enhance suburban climate governance
by Hannah M. Teicher & Carly A. Phillips & Devin Todd - 1328-1346 A green COVID-19 recovery of the EU basic materials sector: identifying potentials, barriers and policy solutions
by Olga Chiappinelli & Timo Gerres & Karsten Neuhoff & Frederik Lettow & Heleen de Coninck & Balázs Felsmann & Eugénie Joltreau & Gauri Khandekar & Pedro Linares & Jörn Richstein & Aleksander Śniegocki & Jan Stede & Tomas Wyns & Cornelis Zandt & Lars Zetterberg - 1347-1356 Fossil fuels, climate change, and the COVID-19 crisis: pathways for a just and green post-pandemic recovery
by Philippe Le Billon & Païvi Lujala & Devyani Singh & Vance Culbert & Berit Kristoffersen - 1357-1367 Revising the EU ETS and CORSIA in times of the COVID-19 pandemic: challenges for reducing global aviation emissions
by Duong Thi Thuy Mai - 1368-1382 Towards a post-pandemic policy framework to manage climate-related financial risks and resilience
by Paola D’Orazio - 1383-1397 Accelerating the speed and scale of climate finance in the post-pandemic context
by Jean-Charles Hourcade & Dipak Dasgupta & Frédéric Ghersi
October 2021, Volume 21, Issue 9
- 1111-1119 Climate Change Acts: Origins, Dynamics, and Consequences
by Sarah L. Nash & Diarmuid Torney & Simon Matti - 1120-1131 Climate Change Acts in Scotland, Austria, Denmark and Sweden: the role of discourse and deliberation
by Sarah Louise Nash & Reinhard Steurer - 1132-1145 Sweden’s Climate Act – its origin and emergence
by Mikael Karlsson - 1146-1158 The Swedish climate policy framework as a means for climate policy integration: an assessment
by Simon Matti & Christer Petersson & Charlotta Söderberg - 1159-1174 Idealism, pragmatism, and the power of compromise in the negotiation of New Zealand’s Zero Carbon Act
by Ian Bailey & Oscar Fitch-Roy & Tor Håkon Jackson Inderberg & David Benson - 1175-1189 Leader on paper, laggard in practice: policy fragmentation and the multi-level paralysis in implementation of the Mexican Climate Act
by Israel Solorio - 1190-1204 Convergent evolution: framework climate legislation in Australia
by Peter Christoff & Robyn Eckersley - 1205-1217 Climate change acts non-adoption as potential for renewed expertise and climate activism: the Belgian case
by Amandine Orsini & Loïc Cobut & Maxime Gaborit - 1218-1233 The influence of climate change advisory bodies on political debates: evidence from the UK Committee on Climate Change
by Alina Averchenkova & Sam Fankhauser & Jared J. Finnegan - 1234-1247 Routes to credible climate commitment: the UK and Denmark compared
by Matthew Lockwood
September 2021, Volume 21, Issue 8
- 983-1004 National ‘fair shares’ in reducing greenhouse gas emissions within the principled framework of international environmental law
by Lavanya Rajamani & Louise Jeffery & Niklas Höhne & Frederic Hans & Alyssa Glass & Gaurav Ganti & Andreas Geiges - 1005-1019 Countries’ commitments to soil organic carbon in Nationally Determined Contributions
by Liesl Wiese & Eva Wollenberg & Viridiana Alcántara-Shivapatham & Meryl Richards & Sadie Shelton & Susanna Esther Hönle & Claudia Heidecke & Beáta Emoke Madari & Claire Chenu - 1020-1036 Quantifying international public finance for climate change adaptation in Africa
by Georgia Savvidou & Aaron Atteridge & Kulthoum Omari-Motsumi & Christopher H. Trisos - 1037-1052 Phasing out fossil fuel subsidies in the EU? Exploring the role of state aid rules
by Julian Nowag & Luis Mundaca & Max Åhman - 1053-1065 An industrial policy framework for transforming energy and emissions intensive industries towards zero emissions
by Lars J. Nilsson & Fredric Bauer & Max Åhman & Fredrik N. G. Andersson & Chris Bataille & Stephane de la Rue du Can & Karin Ericsson & Teis Hansen & Bengt Johansson & Stefan Lechtenböhmer & Mariësse van Sluisveld & Valentin Vogl - 1066-1085 Concept of climate-charged airspaces: a potential policy instrument for internalizing aviation's climate impact of non-CO2 effects
by Malte Niklaß & Volker Grewe & Volker Gollnick & Katrin Dahlmann - 1086-1098 What drives cooperation in carbon markets? Lessons from decision-makers in the Australia-EU ETS linking negotiations
by Stuart Evans & Aaron Z. Wu - 1099-1110 Methodology to analyse the impact of an emissions trading system in Chile
by Carlos Benavides & Manuel Díaz & Raúl O’ Ryan & Sebastián Gwinner & Erick Sierra
August 2021, Volume 21, Issue 7
- 853-867 Responding to the climate emergency: how are UK universities establishing sustainable workplace routines for flying and food?
by Claire Hoolohan & Carly McLachlan & Christopher Jones & Alice Larkin & Christina Birch & Sarah Mander & John Broderick - 868-883 Global adaptation governance: how intergovernmental organizations mainstream climate change adaptation
by Lisa Maria Dellmuth & Maria-Therese Gustafsson - 884-896 Supportive governance for city-scale low carbon building retrofits: a case study from Shanghai
by Zhongjue Yu & Yong Geng & Qi He & Lucy Oates & Andrew Sudmant & Andy Gouldson & Raimund Bleischwitz - 897-911 A classification framework for carbon tax revenue use
by Lee-Ann Steenkamp - 912-926 Assessing losses and damages to ecosystem services: current state and opportunities for the Warsaw International Mechanism under the UNFCCC
by Sally Janzen & Lucy Emerton & Kees van der Geest & Liliana Narvaez & Zita Sebesvari - 927-938 CCUS As a second-best choice for China's carbon neutrality: an institutional analysis
by Shengqing Xu & Shuiping Dai - 939-957 Caught in between: credibility and feasibility of the voluntary carbon market post-2020
by Nicolas Kreibich & Lukas Hermwille - 958-975 How does climate change adaptation policy in India consider gender? An analysis of 28 state action plans
by Chandni Singh & Divya Solomon & Nitya Rao - 976-982 Public debt and intergenerational ethics: how to fund a clean technology ‘Apollo program’?
by Matthew Rendall
July 2021, Volume 21, Issue 6
- 719-744 Network structures, environmental technology and contagion
by Côme Billard - 745-764 Designing an effective climate-policy mix: accounting for instrument synergy
by J. van den Bergh & J. Castro & S. Drews & F. Exadaktylos & J. Foramitti & F. Klein & T. Konc & I. Savin - 765-777 Bots and online climate discourses: Twitter discourse on President Trump’s announcement of U.S. withdrawal from the Paris Agreement
by Thomas Marlow & Sean Miller & J. Timmons Roberts - 778-791 The EU ETS to 2030 and beyond: adjusting the cap in light of the 1.5°C target and current energy policies
by Aleksandar Zaklan & Jakob Wachsmuth & Vicki Duscha - 792-803 Delinking the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme from the Kyoto Protocol: comparing theory with practice
by Suzi Kerr & Judd Ormsby & Dominic White - 804-822 The effect of the EU ETS free allowance allocation on energy mix diversification: the case of Poland’s power sector
by Nathalie Müller & Jordi J. Teixidó - 823-842 Economic and environmental impacts of a proposed ‘Carbon adder' on New York’s energy market
by Gökçe Akɪn-Olçum & Christoph Böhringer & Thomas Rutherford & Andrew Schreiber - 843-852 REDD+ and leakage: debunking myths and promoting integrated solutions
by Charlotte Streck
May 2021, Volume 21, Issue 5
- 593-603 Beyond good intentions, to urgent action: Former UNFCCC leaders take stock of thirty years of international climate change negotiations
by Richard Kinley & Michael Zammit Cutajar & Yvo de Boer & Christiana Figueres - 604-615 Drivers of global and national CO2 emissions changes 2000–2017
by Qiwen Xia & Hailin Wang & Xinzhe Liu & Xunzhang Pan - 616-634 Performing accountability: face-to-face account-giving in multilateral climate transparency processes
by Aarti Gupta & Sylvia Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen & Nila Kamil & Amy Ching & Nadia Bernaz - 635-651 Assessing state compliance with multilateral climate transparency requirements: ‘Transparency Adherence Indices’ and their research and policy implications
by Romain Weikmans & Aarti Gupta - 652-665 Climate justice and rights-based litigation in a post-Paris world
by Charles Beauregard & D’Arcy Carlson & Stacy-ann Robinson & Charles Cobb & Mykela Patton - 666-677 Participatory modelling for climate change adaptation: the poultry sector in Nigeria
by Laura Schmitt Olabisi & Olubukola Osuntade & Lenis Saweda O. Liverpool-Tasie & Jelili Adebiyi - 678-698 Potential implications of carbon dioxide removal for the sustainable development goals
by Matthias Honegger & Axel Michaelowa & Joyashree Roy - 699-717 Carbon accounting for negative emissions technologies
by Matthew Brander & Francisco Ascui & Vivian Scott & Simon Tett
April 2021, Volume 21, Issue 4
- 421-433 Upward-scaling tipping cascades to meet climate goals: plausible grounds for hope
by Simon Sharpe & Timothy M. Lenton - 434-454 Beyond shared socioeconomic pathways (SSPs) and representative concentration pathways (RCPs): climate policy implementation scenarios for Europe, the US and China
by Richard J. Hewitt & Roger Cremades & Dmitry V. Kovalevsky & Klaus Hasselmann - 455-474 Decarbonising the critical sectors of aviation, shipping, road freight and industry to limit warming to 1.5–2°C
by M. Sharmina & O. Y. Edelenbosch & C. Wilson & R. Freeman & D. E. H. J. Gernaat & P. Gilbert & A. Larkin & E. W. Littleton & M. Traut & D. P. van Vuuren & N. E. Vaughan & F. R. Wood & C. Le Quéré - 475-491 Leveraging the transport sector to mitigate long-term climate policy costs in China: a behavioural perspective
by Meriem Hamdi-Cherif & Jun Li & Eoin Ó Broin - 492-513 Assessment of greenhouse gas mitigation pathways for Thailand towards achievement of the 2°C and 1.5°C Paris Agreement targets
by Salony Rajbhandari & Bundit Limmeechokchai - 514-528 Increasing the ambition of mitigation action in small emitters: the case of Mauritius
by Prakash N. K. Deenapanray - 529-545 Climate finance policy in practice: a review of the evidence
by Rishikesh Ram Bhandary & Kelly Sims Gallagher & Fang Zhang - 546-562 Economic and environmental impacts of raising revenues for climate finance from public sources
by Christoph Böhringer & Jan Schneider & Marco Springmann - 563-580 Central banks, financial stability and policy coordination in the age of climate uncertainty: a three-layered analytical and operational framework
by Romain Svartzman & Patrick Bolton & Morgan Despres & Luiz Awazu Pereira Da Silva & Frédéric Samama - 581-592 Greening monetary policy
by Dirk Schoenmaker
March 2021, Volume 21, Issue 3
- 277-289 Who puts a price on carbon, why and how? A global empirical analysis of carbon pricing policies
by Yves Steinebach & Xavier Fernández-i-Marín & Christian Aschenbrenner - 290-306 A carbon horse race: abatement subsidies vs. permit trading in Switzerland
by Beat Hintermann & Maja Žarković - 307-317 Border carbon adjustments and industrial competitiveness in a European Green Deal
by Stuart Evans & Michael A. Mehling & Robert A. Ritz & Paul Sammon - 318-336 Influence of a pilot carbon trading policy on enterprises’ low-carbon innovation in China
by Shao-Zhou Qi & Chao-Bo Zhou & Kai Li & Si-Yan Tang - 337-352 A blockchain-based emissions trading system for the road transport sector: policy design and evaluation
by Wenxiang Li & Luqi Wang & Ye Li & Bo Liu - 353-367 Understanding public concern about climate change in Europe, 2008–2017: the influence of economic factors and right-wing populism
by Sem Duijndam & Pieter van Beukering - 368-382 Climate migration and health system preparedness in the United States
by Nika D. Sabasteanski - 383-395 Negotiating the future of the Adaptation Fund: on the politics of defining and defending justice in the post-Paris Agreement period
by Anna McGinn & Cindy Isenhour - 396-405 Enabling incremental adaptation in disadvantaged communities: polycentric governance with a focus on non-financial capital
by Hamed Moftakhari & Wanyun Shao & Hamid Moradkhani & Amir AghaKouchak & Brett Sanders & Richard Matthew & Steven Jones & James Orbinski - 406-420 Sub- and non-state climate action: a framework to assess progress, implementation and impact
by Thomas N. Hale & Sander Chan & Angel Hsu & Andrew Clapper & Cynthia Elliott & Pedro Faria & Takeshi Kuramochi & Shannon McDaniel & Milimer Morgado & Mark Roelfsema & Mayra Santaella & Neelam Singh & Ian Tout & Chris Weber & Amy Weinfurter & Oscar Widerberg
February 2021, Volume 21, Issue 2
- 133-151 National laws for enhancing flood resilience in the context of climate change: potential and shortcomings
by Sara Mehryar & Swenja Surminski - 152-170 Planning for a different kind of sea change: lessons from Australia for sea level rise and coastal flooding
by Ayşın Dedekorkut-Howes & Elnaz Torabi & Michael Howes - 171-185 Applying intersectionality to climate hazards: a theoretically informed study of wildfire in northern Saskatchewan
by Heidi M. Walker & Maureen G. Reed & Amber J. Fletcher - 186-202 Addressing the climate change adaptation puzzle: a psychological science perspective
by Myriam N. Bechtoldt & Alexander Götmann & Ulf Moslener & W. Pieter Pauw - 203-221 Disaster management leadership and policy making: a critical examination of communitarian and individualistic understandings of resilience and vulnerability
by Mark Crosweller & Petra Tschakert - 222-231 Modelling net-zero emissions energy systems requires a change in approach
by S. Pye & O. Broad & C. Bataille & P. Brockway & H. E. Daly & R. Freeman & A. Gambhir & O. Geden & F. Rogan & S. Sanghvi & J. Tomei & I. Vorushylo & J. Watson - 232-250 Correcting course: the emission reduction potential of international cooperative initiatives
by Swithin Lui & Takeshi Kuramochi & Sybrig Smit & Mark Roelfsema & Angel Hsu & Amy Weinfurter & Sander Chan & Thomas Hale & Hanna Fekete & Katharina Lütkehermöller & Maria Jose de Villafranca Casas & Leonardo Nascimento & Sebastian Sterl & Niklas Höhne - 251-263 The impact of strategic climate legislation: evidence from expert interviews on the UK Climate Change Act
by Alina Averchenkova & Sam Fankhauser & Jared J. Finnegan - 264-276 Perceptions of climate-related risk in Southeast Asia’s power sector
by Oliver W. Johnson & Peter du Pont & Cannelle Gueguen-Teil
January 2021, Volume 21, Issue 1
- 1-15 Deepening transparency about value-laden assumptions in energy and environmental modelling: improving best practices for both modellers and non-modellers
by John Bistline & Mark Budolfson & Blake Francis - 16-32 Integrating climate and food policies in higher education: a case study of the University of California
by David Arthur Cleveland & Jennifer Ayla Jay - 33-46 Who do you trust? How trust in partial and impartial government institutions influences climate policy attitudes
by Joakim Kulin & Ingemar Johansson Sevä - 47-62 Mobilising private climate finance for sustainable energy access and climate change mitigation in Sub-Saharan Africa
by Axel Michaelowa & Stephan Hoch & Anne-Kathrin Weber & Ruth Kassaye & Tesfaye Hailu - 63-77 Progressive supply-side policy under the Paris Agreement to enhance geological carbon storage
by Paul D. Zakkour & Wolfgang Heidug & Andrew Howard & R. Stuart Haszeldine & Myles R. Allen & David Hone - 78-92 The making of green steel in the EU: a policy evaluation for the early commercialization phase
by Valentin Vogl & Max Åhman & Lars J. Nilsson - 93-106 A pathway design framework for sectoral deep decarbonization: the case of passenger transportation
by Julien Lefèvre & Yann Briand & Steve Pye & Jordi Tovilla & Francis Li & Ken Oshiro & Henri Waisman & Jean-Michel Cayla & Runsen Zhang - 107-119 The financial impact of fossil fuel divestment
by Auke Plantinga & Bert Scholtens - 120-132 Catalysing private and public action for climate change mitigation: the World Bank’s role in international carbon markets
by Axel Michaelowa & Katharina Michaelowa & Igor Shishlov & Dario Brescia
April 2020, Volume 20, Issue S1
- 1-13 Consumption-based carbon accounting: sense and sensibility
by Arnold Tukker & Hector Pollitt & Maurits Henkemans - 14-27 Beyond peak emission transfers: historical impacts of globalization and future impacts of climate policies on international emission transfers
by Richard Wood & Michael Grubb & Annela Anger-Kraavi & Hector Pollitt & Ben Rizzo & Eva Alexandri & Konstantin Stadler & Dan Moran & Edgar Hertwich & Arnold Tukker - 28-38 Quantifying the potential for consumer-oriented policy to reduce European and foreign carbon emissions
by Daniel Moran & Richard Wood & Edgar Hertwich & Kim Mattson & Joao F. D. Rodriguez & Karin Schanes & John Barrett - 39-57 The structure, drivers and policy implications of the European carbon footprint
by Richard Wood & Karsten Neuhoff & Dan Moran & Moana Simas & Michael Grubb & Konstantin Stadler - 58-73 Consumption-oriented policy instruments for fostering greenhouse gas mitigation
by Michael Grubb & Doug Crawford-Brown & Karsten Neuhoff & Karin Schanes & Sonja Hawkins & Alexandra Poncia - 74-89 The impact of implementing a consumption charge on carbon-intensive materials in Europe
by Hector Pollitt & Karsten Neuhoff & Xinru Lin - 90-106 Towards accepted procedures for calculating international consumption-based carbon accounts
by Arnold Tukker & Richard Wood & Sarah Schmidt
November 2020, Volume 20, Issue 10
- 1193-1208 Reducing inequality resulting from UK low-carbon policy
by Anne Owen & John Barrett - 1209-1225 Approaching climate change mitigation policymaking in South Africa: a view from critical complexity thinking
by Emily Tyler & Brett Cohen - 1226-1241 Challenges and opportunities for climate policy integration in oil-producing countries: the case of the UAE and Oman
by Aisha Al-Sarihi & Michael Mason - 1242-1256 Impacts of climate change policies worldwide on the Russian economy
by Igor Makarov & Henry Chen & Sergey Paltsev - 1257-1273 A cross-sectoral integrated assessment of alternatives for climate mitigation in Madagascar
by Larissa P. Nogueira & Francesco Dalla Longa & Bob van der Zwaan - 1274-1289 En route to China's mid-century climate goal: comparison of emissions intensity versus absolute targets
by Anastasis Giannousakis & Lavinia Baumstark & Elmar Kriegler - 1290-1304 A factor of two: how the mitigation plans of ‘climate progressive’ nations fall far short of Paris-compliant pathways
by Kevin Anderson & John F. Broderick & Isak Stoddard - 1305-1321 Public support for aviation policy measures in Sweden
by Jörgen Larsson & Simon Matti & Jonas Nässén - 1322-1335 Climate change communication and public engagement in interpersonal deliberative settings: evidence from the Irish citizens’ assembly
by Lala Muradova & Hayley Walker & Francesca Colli - 1336-1343 Utilization-focused scientific policy advice: a six-point checklist
by Fritz Sager & Céline Mavrot & Markus Hinterleitner & David Kaufmann & Martin Grosjean & Thomas F. Stocker - 1344-1348 A dual-track transition to global carbon pricing: nice idea, but doomed to fail
by Erik Haites - 1349-1354 A dual-track transition to global carbon pricing: the glass is half full
by Jeroen C. J. M. van den Bergh & Arild Angelsen & Andrea Baranzini & W. J. Wouter Botzen & Stefano Carattini & Stefan Drews & Tessa Dunlop & Eric Galbraith & Elisabeth Gsottbauer & Richard B. Howarth & Emilio Padilla & Jordi Roca & Robert C. Schmidt
October 2020, Volume 20, Issue 9
- 1055-1056 In praise of our esteemed reviewers
by Frank Jotzo & Harald Winkler & Joanna Depledge & Jill Fisher - 1057-1069 A dual-track transition to global carbon pricing
by Jeroen C. J. M. van den Bergh & Arild Angelsen & Andrea Baranzini & W. J. W. Botzen & Stefano Carattini & Stefan Drews & Tessa Dunlop & Eric Galbraith & Elisabeth Gsottbauer & Richard B. Howarth & Emilio Padilla & Jordi Roca & Robert C. Schmidt - 1070-1091 Carbon pricing and competitiveness: are they at odds?
by Frank Venmans & Jane Ellis & Daniel Nachtigall - 1092-1111 Political conflict and climate policy: the European emissions trading system as a Trojan Horse for the low-carbon transition?
by Jochen Markard & Daniel Rosenbloom - 1112-1126 Managing uncertainty in carbon offsets: insights from California’s standardized approach
by Barbara Haya & Danny Cullenward & Aaron L. Strong & Emily Grubert & Robert Heilmayr & Deborah A. Sivas & Michael Wara - 1127-1140 Carbon pricing and economic populism: the case of Ontario
by Leigh Raymond