Content
Summer 2024, Volume 24, Issue 3
- 191-199 Understanding the Blue Acceleration: What It Means, How It Works, and Why It Matters
by Elizabeth Mendenhall - 200-203 A Just Energy Transition: Getting Decarbonisation Right in a Time of Crisis by Ed Atkins
by Sezen Kaya-Sönmez
Spring 2024, Volume 24, Issue 2
- 170-173 Climate Change Isn’t Everything: Liberating Climate Politics from Alarmism by Mike Hulme
by Casey Stevens
Winter 2024, Volume 24, Issue 1
- 1-9 Environmental Terrorism Twenty Years On
by Elizabeth L. Chalecki - 10-30 Valuing Nature to Save It? The Centrality of Valuation in the New Spirit of Conservation
by Sylvain Maechler & Valérie Boisvert - 31-51 From Gender-Blind to Gender Bind: Foregrounding Gender in the History of the UNFCCC
by Joanna Flavell - 52-75 Faith in Science: Religion and Climate Change Attitudes in the Middle East
by Nimah Mazaheri - 76-99 Transnational Governing at the Climate–Biodiversity Frontier: Employing a Governmentality Perspective
by Anouk Fransen & Harriet Bulkeley - 100-123 Leveraging “Enabling Power†Through Awarding in Global Climate Governance: Catalytic Impacts of UNFCCC’s Global Climate Action Award
by Aron Teunissen & Sander Chan - 124-137 The Longue Durée of International Environmental Norm Change: Global Environmental Politics Meets the English School of International Relations
by Robert Falkner - 138-154 Toward a Typology of Environmental Cooperation in Postconflict Settings: The Case of Jordan and Israel
by Rina Kedem & Eran Feitelson & Suleiman Halasah & Yael Teff-Seker - 155-157 The Ecocentrists: A History of Radical Environmentalism by Keith Makoto Woodhouse
by Jennifer Hadden
Autumn 2023, Volume 23, Issue 4
- 1-2 Introduction
by Susan Park & Henrik Selin & D. G. Webster - 3-16 Surging Biojustice Environmentalism from Below: Hope for Ending the Earth System Emergency?
by Peter Dauvergne & Jennifer Clapp - 17-25 All Hands on Deck: Solutions-Based Pedagogies for Global Environmental Politics
by Ellen Alexandra Holtmaat & Mimi Alford-Hamburg - 26-51 Most (Un)wanted: Explaining Emerging Relationships Between "Invasive Alien" Species and Animal Governance
by Cebuan Bliss & Ingrid J. Visseren-Hamakers & Duncan Liefferink - 52-72 Diversifying Boundary Organizations: The Making of a Global Platform for Indigenous (and Local) Knowledge in the UNFCCC
by Andrés López-Rivera - 73-93 Green Financial and Regulatory Policies: Why Are Some Central Banks Moving Faster than Others?
by Bhavya Gupta & Ruijie Cheng & Ramkishen S. Rajan - 94-118 China in Transnational Extractives Governance: A Mapping Exercise
by Hyeyoon Park - 119-140 Degrowth, Air Travel, and Global Environmental Governance: Scaffolding a Multilateral Agreement for a Smaller and More Sustainable Aviation Sector
by Ryan Katz-Rosene & Terhemba Ambe-Uva - 141-169 Market Masquerades? Corporate Climate Initiative Effects on Firm-Level Climate Performance
by David Coen & Kyle S. Herman & Tom Pegram - 170-200 Keeping Promises? Democracies' Ability to Harmonize Their International and National Climate Commitments
by Jack Kessel Baker - 201-216 Is Democracy the Answer to Intractable Climate Change?
by Angela Chesler & Debra Javeline & Kimberly Peh & Shana Scogin - 217-219 Global Environmental Politics: The Transformative Role of Emerging Economies by Johannes Urpelainen
by Inkyoung Kim - 220-221 African Ecomedia: Network Forms, Planetary Politics by Cajetan Iheka
by Marielle Papin
Summer 2023, Volume 23, Issue 3
- 1-11 Understanding the Politics and Governance of Climate Change Loss and Damage
by Lisa Vanhala & Elisa Calliari & Adelle Thomas - 12-31 The Effects of Political Knowledge Use by Developing Country Negotiators in Loss and Damage Negotiations
by Olivia Serdeczny - 32-51 From “Loss and Damage†to “Losses and Damages†: Orthographies of Climate Change Loss and Damage in the IPCC
by Friederike Hartz - 52-70 Resilience and Nonideal Justice in Climate Loss and Damage Governance
by Ivo Wallimann-Helmer - 71-94 What Does Loss and Damage Mean at the Country Level? A Global Mapping Through Nationally Determined Contributions
by Elisa Calliari & Ben Ryder - 95-119 Tactical Opposition: Obstructing Loss and Damage Finance in the United Nations Climate Negotiations
by Danielle Falzon & Fred Shaia & J. Timmons Roberts & Md. Fahad Hossain & Stacy-ann Robinson & Mizan R. Khan & David Ciplet - 120-126 Pipeline Politics and the Future of Environmental Justice Struggles in North America
by Amy Janzwood - 127-129 Greening China’s New Silk Roads: The Sustainable Governance of Belt and Road by R. James Ferguson
by Usman Ashraf - 130-131 AI in the Wild: Sustainability in the Age of Artificial Intelligence by Peter Dauvergne
by Rachel Tiller - 132-134 Beyond Climate Breakdown: Envisioning New Stories of Radical Hope by Peter Friederici
by Peter J. Jacques
Spring 2023, Volume 23, Issue 2
- 1-10 Race, Ethnicity, and the Case for Intersectional Water Security
by Cameron Harrington & Phellecitus Montana & Jeremy J. Schmidt & Ashok Swain - 11-30 The Politics of Environmental Consensus: The Case of the World Commission on Dams
by Christopher Schulz & William M. Adams - 31-53 Institutional Adaptation in Slow Motion: Zooming In on Desertification Governance
by Noémie Laurens - 54-73 The Political Economy of Protected Area Designations: Commercial Interests in Conservation Policy
by Justin Alger - 74-101 Growing Apart: China and India at the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol
by Shiming Yang - 102-124 The Homogenization of Urban Climate Action Discourses
by Linda Westman & Vanesa Castán Broto & Ping Huang - 125-147 Multilateral Climate Finance Coordination: Politics and Depoliticization in Practice
by Jakob Skovgaard & Kevin M. Adams & Kendra Dupuy & Adis Dzebo & Mikkel Funder & Adam Moe Fejerskov & Zoha Shawoo - 148-149 Effective Advocacy: Lessons from East Asia’s Environmentalists by Mary Alice Haddad
by Ming-sho Ho
Winter 2023, Volume 23, Issue 1
- 1-2 Introduction
by Susan Park & Henrik Selin & D. G. Webster - 3-10 Toward a Super-COP? Timing, Temporality, and Rethinking World Climate Governance
by Michael W. Manulak - 11-19 The Failure of CBDR in Global Environmental Politics
by Michal Kolmaš - 20-41 The Security–Sustainability Nexus: Lithium Onshoring in the Global North
by Thea Riofrancos - 42-67 Accountability as Constructive Dialogue: Can NGOs Persuade States to Conserve Biodiversity?
by Ana Maria Ulloa - 68-90 Backlash to Climate Policy
by James J. Patterson - 91-116 Greening China’s Belt and Road Initiative: From Norm Localization to Norm Subsidiarity?
by Yixian Sun & Bowen Yu - 117-132 Differentiation in Environmental Treaty Making: Measuring Provisions and How They Reshape the Depth–Participation Dilemma
by Deborah Barros Leal Farias & Charles Roger - 133-144 Comment: Global Climate Policy and Collective Action
by Amanda Kennard & Keith E. Schnakenberg - 145-151 Reply: The Persistent Absence of Empirical Evidence for Free-Riding in Global Climate Politics
by Michaël Aklin & Matto Mildenberger - 152-157 Climate Change, Security, and the International System: It’s Still the Same Old Story
by Ronnie D. Lipschutz - 158-159 Plastic Unlimited: How Corporations Are Fueling the Ecological Crisis and What We Can Do About It by Alice Mah
by David Downie - 160-161 The Pivotal Generation: Why We Have a Moral Responsibility to Slow Climate Change Right Now by Henry Shue
by Coralie Boulard - 162-163 Agency in Earth System Governance edited by Michele M. Betsill, Tabitha M. Benney, and Andrea K. Gerlak
by Philippe Evoy
Autumn 2022, Volume 22, Issue 4
- 1-14 The Supply Side of Climate Policies: Keeping Unburnable Fossil Fuels in the Ground
by Lorenzo Pellegrini & Murat Arsel - 15-27 Unburnable Fossil Fuels and Climate Finance: Compensation for Rights Holders
by Marti Orta-Martinez & Lorenzo Pellegrini & Murat Arsel & Carlos Mena & Gorka Munoa - 28-47 Pathways to an International Agreement to Leave Fossil Fuels in the Ground
by Harro van Asselt & Peter Newell - 48-69 Counting Carbon or Counting Coal? Anchoring Climate Governance in Fossil Fuel-Based Accountability Frameworks
by Fergus Green & Declan Kuch - 70-94 De-risking Decarbonization: Accelerating Fossil Fuel Retirement by Shifting Costs to Future Winners
by Alexander Gard-Murray - 95-128 Phasing Out Fossil Fuels: Determinants of Production Cuts and Implications for an International Agreement
by Pavi Lujala & Philippe Le Billon & Nicolas Gaulin - 129-150 Supply-Side Climate Policies in Major Oil-Producing Countries: Norway's and Canada's Struggles to Align Climate Leadership with Fossil Fuel Extraction
by Kathryn Harrison & Guri Bang - 151-172 Orchestrating Global Climate Governance Through Data: The UNFCCC Secretariat and the Global Climate Action Platform
by Laura Mai & Joshua Philipp Elsasser - 173-196 It's a Performance, Not an Orchestra! Rethinking Soft Coordination in Global Climate Governance
by Stefan C. Aykut & Felix Schenuit & Jan Klenke & Emilie d'Amico - 197-202 Institutional Structure, National Power, and Knowledge in the International Governance of Fisheries
by J. Samuel Barkin - 203-204 Engineering Vulnerability: In Pursuit of Climate Adaptation by Sarah E. Vaughn
by Charlotte Kate Weatherill - 205-208 Security and Conservation: The Politics of the Illegal Wildlife Trade by Rosaleen Duffy
by Geoffrey Wandesforde-Smith - 209-211 Global Capitalism and Climate Change: The Need for an Alternative System by Hans A. Baer
by Ronnie D. Lipschutz
Summer 2022, Volume 22, Issue 3
- 1-1 Introduction
by Steven Bernstein & Matthew Hoffmann & Erika Weinthal - 2-11 Disaster Making in the Capitalocene
by Shannon O'Lear & Francis Masse & Hannah Dickinson & Rosaleen Duffy - 12-37 How Do Right-Wing Populist Parties Influence Climate and Renewable Energy Policies? Evidence from OECD Countries
by Ben Lockwood & Matthew Lockwood - 38-58 Accelerating Climate Action: The Politics of Nonstate Actor Engagement in the Paris Regime
by Maria Jernnas & Eva Losvbrand - 59-80 Exclusive Apart, Inclusive as a System: Polycentricity in Climate City Networks
by Sayel Cortes & Jeroen van der Heijden & Ingrid Boas & Simon Bush - 81-103 Transnational Governance and the Urban Politics of Nature-Based Solutions for Climate Change
by Laura Tozer & Harriet Bulkeley & Linjun Xie - 104-135 Input Legitimacy of Voluntary Sustainability Standards and Acceptance Among Southern Producers: A Qualitative Comparative Analysis
by Greetje Schouten & Hilde M. Toonen & Dorine Leeuwerik - 136-170 Transnational Private Environmental Rule Makers as Interest Organizations: Evidence from the European Union
by Stefan Renckens & Kristen Pue & Amy Janzwood - 171-193 The Influence of Alternative Development Finance on the World Bank's Safeguards Regime
by Gus Greenstein - 194-196 The Survival Nexus by Charles Weiss
by Peter M. Haas - 197-199 Private Governance and Public Authority: Regulating Sustainability in a Global Economy by Stefan Renckens
by Ellen Alexandra Holtmaat - 200-202 The Untold Story of the World's Leading Environmental Institution: UNEP at Fifty by Maria Ivanova
by Lucile Maertens
Spring 2022, Volume 22, Issue 2
- 1-11 Climate Governance Antagonisms: Policy Stability and Repoliticization
by Matthew Paterson & Paul Tobin & Stacy D. VanDeveer - 12-22 Invasive Species in Post-2020 Global Environmental Politics
by Jesann Gonzalez Cruz & McKenzie F. Johnson - 23-44 Crime, Security, and Illegal Wildlife Trade: Political Ecologies of International Conservation
by Rosaleen Duffy - 45-69 Small NGOs and Agenda-Setting in Global Conservation Governance: The Case of Pangolin Conservation
by Takumi Shibaike - 70-94 Indigenous Peoples and Multiscalar Environmental Governance: The Opening and Closure of Participatory Spaces
by Maria-Therese Gustafsson & Almut Schilling-Vacaflor - 95-116 Conflicting Sovereignties: Global Conservation, Protected Areas, and Indigenous Nations in the Peruvian Amazon
by Roger Merino - 117-135 Judicializing Environmental Governance? The Case of Transnational Corporate Accountability
by Daniel Bertram - 136-155 From Progress to Delay: The Quest for Data in the Negotiations on Greenhouse Gases in the International Maritime Organization
by Kjersti Aalbu & Tore Longva - 156-179 Carbon Emission Performance and Regime Type: The Role of Inequality
by Zorzeta Bakaki & Tobias Bohmelt & Hugh Ward - 180-193 Deploying an Ethnographic Sensibility to Understand Climate Change Governance: Hanging Out, Around, In, and Back
by Lisa Vanhala & Angelica Johansson & Frances Butler - 194-200 Extractivist States: Contesting and Negotiating the "Commodities Consensus" in Bolivia, Ecuador, and Across Latin America
by Andrea Marston - 201-203 The Politics of Rights of Nature: Strategies for Building a More Sustainable Future by Craig M. Kauffman and Pamela L. Martin
by Mary E. Witlacil - 204-206 The Lived Nile: Environment, Disease, and Material Colonial Economy in Egypt by Jennifer L. Derr
by Christopher D. Gore
Winter 2022, Volume 22, Issue 1
- 1-3 Introduction
by Steven Bernstein & Matthew Hoffmann & Erika Weinthal - 4-11 The Paris Agreement as Analogy in Global Environmental Politics
by Nicholas Chan - 12-18 Who Are the Engineers? Solar Geoengineering Research and Justice
by Olufemi Taiwo & Shuchi Talati - 19-43 Design Trade-Offs Under Power Asymmetry: COPs and Flexibility Clauses
by Jean-Frederic Morin & Benjamin Tremblay-Auger & Claire Peacock - 44-68 The International Politics of Carbon Dioxide Removal: Pathways to Cooperative Global Governance
by Bryan Maher & Jonathan Symons - 69-93 The Potential of Co-benefits to Spur Subnational Carbon Pricing in North America: A Qualitative Comparative Analysis
by Daniela Stevens - 94-116 Sustainable Energy for All? Assessing Global Distributive Justice in the Green Climate Fund's Energy Finance
by Diana R. Dorman & David Ciplet - 117-138 Domestic Provision of Global Public Goods: How Other Countries' Behavior Affects Public Support for Climate Policy
by Liam F. Beiser-McGrath & Thomas Bernauer - 139-158 Nationalist Backlash Against Foreign Climate Shaming
by Matias Spektor & Umberto Mignozzetti & Guilherme N. Fasolin - 159-174 Using Earnings Calls to Understand the Political Behavior of Major Polluters
by Paasha Mahdavi & Jessica Green & Jennifer Hadden & Thomas Hale - 175-182 Energizing Comparative Environmental Politics and Comparative Political Economy
by Stacy D. VanDeveer - 183-185 Mercury Stories: Understanding Sustainability Through a Volatile Element
by Azusa Uji
Autumn 2021, Volume 21, Issue 4
- 1-19 Green Industrial Policy and the Global Transformation of Climate Politics
by Bentley Allan & Joanna I. Lewis & Thomas Oatley - 20-41 Energy and the Complexity of International Order
by Thomas Oatley - 42-63 Green Industrial Policy After Paris: Renewable Energy Policy Measures and Climate Goals
by Joanna I. Lewis - 64-87 International Ozone Negotiations and the Green Spiral
by Nina Kelsey - 88-109 The Enemy Within? Green Industrial Policy and Stranded Assets in China's Power Sector
by Jonas Nahm & Johannes Urpelainen - 110-133 The Challenges of Coal Phaseout: Coal Plant Development and Foreign Finance in Indonesia and Vietnam
by Xue Gao & Michael Davidson & Joshua Busby & Christine Shearer & Joshua Eisenman - 134-147 Making Industrial Policy Work for Decarbonization
by Jonas Meckling - 148-153 It All Hinges on China: Environmental Governance in the Twenty-First Century
by Mark Henderson - 154-156 Global Environmental Governance and the Accountability Trap
by Nino David Jordan - 156-158 Fueling Resistance
by Sandra O'Neil - 158-160 Strange Natures: Conservation in the Era of Synthetic Biology
by Adam Wickberg
Summer 2021, Volume 21, Issue 3
- 1-3 Introduction
by Steven Bernstein & Matthew Hoffmann & Erika Weinthal - 4-25 Rethinking the Climate–Conflict Nexus: A Human–Environmental–Climate Security Approach
by Marwa Daoudy - 26-48 Massive Institutional Structures in Global Governance
by Rakhyun E. Kim & Jean-Frédéric Morin - 49-76 Environmental Impacts and Public Opinion About International Trade: Experimental Evidence from Six OECD Countries
by Quynh Nguyen & Robert A. Huber & Thomas Bernauer - 77-96 Value Judgments at the Heart of Green Transformation: The Leverage of Pension Fund Investors
by Monika Berg - 97-123 Populism and Environmental Performance
by Tobias Böhmelt - 124-146 Transparency in Environmental and Resource Governance: Theories of Change for the EITI
by Philippe Le Billon & Päivi Lujala & Siri Aas Rustad - 147-168 Building Environmental Peace: The UN Environment Programme and Knowledge Creation for Environmental Peacebuilding
by Natalia Dalmer - 169-186 Marine Biodiversity Negotiations During COVID-19: A New Role for Digital Diplomacy?
by Alice B. M. Vadrot & Arne Langlet & Ina Tessnow-von Wysocki & Petro Tolochko & Emmanuelle Brogat & Silvia C. Ruiz-Rodríguez - 187-193 Reckoning with Empires: Global Environmental Politics and the Decline and Fall of Nature
by Geoffrey Wandesforde-Smith - 194-196 Cold Rush: The Astonishing True Story of the New Quest for the Polar North
by Chad Briggs - 196-197 Living Well at Others’ Expense: The Hidden Costs of Western Prosperity
by Ayesha Umar - 197-199 The Contamination of the Earth: A History of Pollutions in the Industrial Age
by Lori Lee Oates
Spring 2021, Volume 21, Issue 2
- 1-2 Introduction
by Steven Bernstein & Matthew Hoffmann & Erika Weinthal - 3-22 The Practical Fit of Concepts: Ecosystem Services and the Value of Nature
by Hayley Stevenson & Graeme Auld & Jen Iris Allan & Lorraine Elliott & James Meadowcroft - 23-43 Making Representations: The SDG Process and Major Groups’ Images of the Future
by Henrike Knappe & Oscar Schmidt - 44-72 Policy Characteristics, Electoral Cycles, and the Partisan Politics of Climate Change
by Kai Schulze - 73-98 The Elusive Governance of Climate Change: Nationally Determined Contributions as Commitments and Negotiating Positions
by Justin Leinaweaver & Robert Thomson - 99-120 The Potential and Limits of Environmental Disclosure Regulation: A Global Value Chain Perspective Applied to Tanker Shipping
by René Taudal Poulsen & Stefano Ponte & Judith van Leeuwen & Nishatabbas Rehmatulla - 121-142 Future-Proofing Capitalism: The Paradox of the Circular Economy for Plastics
by Alice Mah - 143-158 Public–Private Inquiries: Institutional Intermediaries and the Transparency Nexus in Global Resource Development
by Deanna Kemp & John R. Owen - 159-164 Animals: Hierarchies of Life and Death
by Sarah J. Martin - 165-166 Energy Cooperation in South Asia: Utilising Natural Resources for Peace and Sustainable Development
by Juliann Emmons Allison - 167-168 Science and Environment in Chile: The Politics of Expert Advice in a Neoliberal Democracy
by Casey Stevens - 168-170 Carbon Markets in a Climate-Changing Capitalism
by Jongeun You
Winter 2021, Volume 21, Issue 1
- 3-12 Planetary Disasters: Wildness and the Perennial Struggle for Control
by Paul Wapner - 13-22 Varieties of Crises: Comparing the Politics of COVID-19 and Climate Change
by Hamish van der Ven & Yixian Sun - 23-53 Silver Lining to Extreme Weather Events? Democracy and Climate Change Mitigation
by Lauri Peterson - 54-75 Build Back Better? Effects of Crisis on Climate Change Adaptation Through Solar Power in Japan and the United States
by Timothy Fraser & Lily Cunningham & Amos Nasongo - 76-88 Embracing the Darkness: Methods for Tackling Uncertainty and Complexity in Environmental Disaster Risks
by Miriam Matejova & Chad M. Briggs - 89-107 Climate Change, Sea Level Rise, and Maritime Baselines: Responding to the Plight of Low-Lying Atoll States
by Chris Armstrong & Jack Corbett - 108-129 Intergovernmental Expert Consensus in the Making: The Case of the Summary for Policy Makers of the IPCC 2014 Synthesis Report
by Kari De Pryck - 130-151 Participatory Designs and Epistemic Authority in Knowledge Platforms for Sustainability
by Alejandro Esguerra & Sandra van der Hel - 152-156 Fishing Across Disciplines
by J. Samuel Barkin
Autumn 2020, Volume 20, Issue 4
- 1-3 Introduction
by Steven Bernstein & Matthew Hoffmann & Erika Weinthal & Matto Mildenberger & Michaël Aklin - 4-27 Prisoners of the Wrong Dilemma: Why Distributive Conflict, Not Collective Action, Characterizes the Politics of Climate Change
by Michaël Aklin & Matto Mildenberger - 28-50 Beliefs About Consequences from Climate Action Under Weak Climate Institutions: Sectors, Home Bias, and International Embeddedness
by Patrick Bayer & Federica Genovese - 51-72 Political Institutions and Supply-Side Climate Politics: Lessons from Coal Ports in Canada and the United States
by Kathryn Harrison - 73-98 Catalytic Cooperation
by Thomas Hale - 99-121 Following the Leaders? How to Restore Progress in Global Climate Governance
by Joshua W. Busby & Johannes Urpelainen - 122-142 Experiments in EU Climate Governance: The Unfulfilled Potential of the Covenant of Mayors
by Ekaterina Domorenok & Giuseppe Acconcia & Lena Bendlin & Xira Ruiz Campillo - 143-166 Big Oil and Climate Regulation: Business as Usual or a Changing Business?
by Irja Vormedal & Lars H. Gulbrandsen & Jon Birger Skjærseth - 167-191 Business for Climate: A Qualitative Comparative Analysis of Policy Support from Transnational Companies
by Daniel Witte - 192-197 Nature Conservation, Extractivist Conflicts, and Indigenous Rights in the Americas
by Sherrie Baver - 198-200 The Origins of the Syrian Conflict: Climate Change and Human Security
by Jeannie Sowers - 200-202 Disaster upon Disaster: Exploring the Gap Between Knowledge, Policy and Practice
by Ronnie D. Lipschutz - 202-204 Repowering Cities: Governing Climate Change Mitigation in New York City, Los Angeles, and Toronto
by Corina McKendry
August 2020, Volume 20, Issue 3
- 1-8 Taking Technology Seriously: Introduction to the Special Issue on NewTechnologies and Global Environmental Politics
by Simon Nicholson & JesseL. Reynolds - 9-27 Nature 4.0: Assisted Evolution, De-extinction, and EcologicalRestoration Technologies
by LesliePaul Thiele - 28-48 Governing New Biotechnologies for Biodiversity Conservation: GeneDrives, International Law, and Emerging Politics
by JesseL. Reynolds - 49-69 Precision Technologies for Agriculture: Digital Farming, Gene-EditedCrops, and the Politics of Sustainability
by Jennifer Clapp & Sarah-Louise Ruder - 70-92 Large-Scale Carbon Dioxide Removal: The Problem ofPhasedown
by EdwardA. Parson & HollyJ. Buck - 93-111 Steering and Influence in Transnational Climate Governance: NonstateEngagement in Solar Geoengineering Research
by JoshuaB. Horton & Barbara Koremenos - 112-117 Redefining Waste to Create Action: The Economic Considerations andCultural Politics of Global Waste
by EllenE. Moore - 118-120 The Politics of theAnthropocene
by Conrad George - 120-121 Climate Change and Ocean Governance: Politics and Policy forThreatened Seas
by Elizabeth Nyman - 121-123 Beyond Greenwash? Explaining Credibility in TransnationalEco-Labeling
by Thomas Hickmann
May 2020, Volume 20, Issue 2
- 1-2 Introduction
by Steven Bernstein & Matthew Hoffmann & Erika Weinthal - 3-11 Shadows of Divestment: The Complications of Diverting Fossil Fuel Finance
by Kate J. Neville - 12-36 Which Way Forward in Measuring the Quality of Life? A Critical Analysis of Sustainability and Well-Being Indicator Sets
by Doris Fuchs & Bernd Schlipphak & Oliver Treib & Le Anh Nguyen Long & Markus Lederer - 37-56 Capitalism and Earth System Governance: An Ecological Marxist Approach
by Michael J. Albert - 57-82 Political Perspectives on Geoengineering: Navigating Problem Definition and Institutional Fit Abstract: Geoengineering technologies are by definition only effective at scale, and so international policy development of some sort will be unavoidable. It is therefore important to include governability as a dimension when assessing the technologies’ feasibility and potential role in addressing climate change. The few existing studies that address this question indicate that for some technologies, policy development at the international level could be exceedingly difficult. This study provides an in-depth, theoretically informed analysis of the obstacles that policymakers face when addressing geoengineering governance. Using data in the form of negotiation proceedings, observations, and interviews with government officials from seven different countries, it argues that a significant part of the challenge lies in dissonances between problem definitions that are widely used in the geoengineering governance debate and the structures and expectations that shape environmental policy making. These include a lack of institutional fit between the process-based differentiation of geoengineering technologies (carbon dioxide removal and solar radiation management) and the international legal architecture, a lack of fit between the urgency of demanded governance action and prevalent scientific and political uncertainties, and a lack of fit between risk–risk trade-off narratives and the precautionary norms of environmental governance
by Ina Möller - 83-104 Under What Conditions Will the Paris Process Produce a Cycle of Increasing Ambition Sufficient to Reach the 2°C Goal?
by Håkon Sælen - 105-127 Brokering Climate Action: The UNFCCC Secretariat Between Parties and Nonparty Stakeholders
by Barbara Saerbeck & Mareike Well & Helge Jörgens & Alexandra Goritz & Nina Kolleck - 128-156 Political Economy Determinants of Carbon Pricing
by Sebastian Levi & Christian Flachsland & Michael Jakob - 162-164 The Paradox of Scale: How NGOs Build, Maintain, and Lose Authority in Environmental Governance
by Craig N. Murphy - 164-166 Africa’s Gene Revolution: Genetically Modified Crops and the Future of African Agriculture
by Robert L. Paarlberg - 166-168 Ecomodernism: Technology, Politics and the Climate Crisis
by Peter Howson
February 2020, Volume 20, Issue 1
- 1-2 Introduction
by Steven Bernstein & Matthew Hoffmann & Erika Weinthal - 3-10 Addressing the Elephant in the Room: Learning from CITESCoP17
by Alfie ChristopherByron Gaffney & Darrick Evensen - 11-37 A Multiscalar and Justice-Led Analysis of REDD+: A Case Study of theNorwegian–Ethiopian Partnership
by David Brown & Marion MacLellan - 38-59 Between the Global Commodity Boom and Subnational State Capacities:Payment for Environmental Services to Fight Deforestation inArgentina
by Isabella Alcañiz & RicardoA. Gutierrez - 60-81 Public Opinion and the Legitimacy of Global Private EnvironmentalGovernance
by FabianG. Neuner - 82-102 Go Means Green: Diasporas’ Affinity for EcologicalGroups
by Anca Turcu & R. Urbatsch - 103-121 What We Know (and Could Know) About International EnvironmentalAgreements
by RonaldB. Mitchell & LilianaB. Andonova & Mark Axelrod & Jörg Balsiger & Thomas Bernauer & JessicaF. Green & James Hollway & RakhyunE. Kim & Jean-Frédéric Morin - 122-126 Utopia and the Anthropocene
by J.Samuel Barkin - 127-129 The Governance of Solar Geoengineering: Managing Climate Changein theAnthropocene
by Simon Nicholson - 129-130 Energy and Climate Policies in China and India: A Two-LevelComparativeStudy
by Anthony Szczurek - 131-133 Mindmade Politics: The Cognitive Roots of International ClimateGovernance
by Matto Mildenberger
November 2019, Volume 19, Issue 4
- 1-2 Introduction
by Matthew Hoffmann & Steven Bernstein & Erika Weinthal - 3-13 The Climate Vulnerabilities of Global Nuclear Power
by SarahM. Jordaan & Afreen Siddiqi & William Kakenmaster & AliceC. Hill