Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T13:24:51.741Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 August 2021

Walter F. Baber
Affiliation:
California State University, Long Beach
Robert V. Bartlett
Affiliation:
University of Vermont
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Democratic Norms of Earth System Governance
Deliberative Politics in the Anthropocene
, pp. 176 - 204
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adam, Silke and Maier, Michaela. 2011. “National Parties as Politicizers of EU Integration? Party Campaign Communication in the Run-Up to the 2009 European Parliament Election.” European Union Politics 12 (3):431453.Google Scholar
Agyeman, Julian and Evans, Bob. 2006. “Justice, Governance, and Sustainability: Perspectives on Environmental Citizenship from North America and Europe.” In Environmental Citizenship, edited by Dobson, Andrew and Bell, Derek, 185206. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Albrow, Martin. 1996. The Global Age. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Albrow, Martin and King, Elizabeth, eds. 1990. Globalization, Knowledge and Society. London: SAGE.Google Scholar
Ambrey, Christopher, Byrne, Jason, Matthews, Tony, Davison, Aiden, Portanger, Chole, and Lo, Alex. 2016. “Cultivating Climate Justice: Green Infrastructure and Suburban Disadvantages in Australia.” Applied Geography 89:5260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amechi, Emeka Polycarp. 2009. “Poverty, Socio-Political Factors and Degradation of the Environment in Sub-Saharan Africa: The Need for a Holistic Approach to the Protection of the Environment and Realisation of the Right to Environment.Law, Environment and Development Journal 5 (2):107129.Google Scholar
American Law Institute. 2000. Restatement of the Law, Third, Torts: Apportionment of Liability. Chicago: American Law Institute.Google Scholar
American Law Institute. 2013. Restatement of the Law, Second, Torts 2d. Chicago: American Law Institute.Google Scholar
Anderson, Paul. 2015. “Which Direction for International Environmental Law?Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 6 (1):98126. https://doi.org/10.4337/jhre.2015.01.05.Google Scholar
Anderton, Karen. 2017. “Understanding the Role of Regional Influence and Innovation in EU Policymaking: Bavaria and Cars and CO2.” Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space 35 (4):640660.Google Scholar
Anderton, Karen and Setze, Joana. 2018. “Subnational Climate Entrepreneurship: Innovative Climate Action in California and Sao Paulo.” Regional Environmental Change 18 (5):12731284.Google Scholar
Andresen, Steinar and Rosendal, Kristin. 2014. “The Role of the United Nations Environment Programme in the Coordination of Multilateral Environmental Agreements.” In International Organizations in Global Environmental Governance, edited by Biermann, Frank, Siebenhüner, Bernd, and Schreyögg, Anna, 133150. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Angel, David P. and Rock, Michael T.. 2005. “Global Standards and the Environmental Performance of Industry.” Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 37 (11):19031918.Google Scholar
Angel, David P., Hamilton, Trina, and Huber, Matthew T.. 2007. “Global Environmental Standards for Industry.” Annual Review of Environment and Resources 32 (1):295316.Google Scholar
Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project. 2018. “ASAP: Local Food, Strong Farms, Healthy Communities.” Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project, accessed 13 March. http://asapconnections.org/.Google Scholar
Arendt, Hannah. 2005. The Promise of Politics. New York: Schocken.Google Scholar
Arias-Maldonado, Manuel. 2019. “The ‘Anthropocene’ in Philosophy: The Neo-material Turn and the Question of Nature.” In Anthropocene Encounters: New Directions in Green Political Thinking, edited by Biermann, Frank and Lövbrand, Eva, 5066. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Armitage, Derek, de Loë, Rob, and Plummer, Ryan. 2012. “Environmental Governance and Its Implications for Conservation Practice.” Conservation Letters 5 (4):245255.Google Scholar
Arnold, Jennifer S. and Fernandez-Gimenez, Maria. 2007. “Building Participatory Capital through Participatory Research: An Analysis of Collaboration on Tohono O’odham Tribal Rangelands in Arizona.” Society and Natural Resources 20 (6):481495.Google Scholar
Ashwood, Loka, Harden, Noelle, Bell, Michael, and Bland, William. 2014. “Linked and Situated: Grounded Knowledge.” Rural Sociology 79 (4):427452.Google Scholar
Auld, Graeme and Gulbrandsen, Lars. 2014. “Learning through Disclosure: The Evolving Importance of Transparency in the Practice of Nonstate Certification.” In Transparency in Global Environmental Governance: Critical Perspectives, edited by Gupta, Aarti and Mason, Michael, 271296. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. 1983. Managing the Future: Matrix Models for the Postindustrial Polity. University, AL: University of Alabama Press.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. 2010. “Democratic Deliberation and Environmental Practice: The Case of Natural Resource Management.” Environmental Practice 12:195201.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. 2011. “Administrative Law and Discursive Democracy: Toward a Comparative Perspective.” International Journal of Public Administration 34 (1):297311.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. 2014. “Public Management for Volatile Times: Toward Adaptive, Collaborative, and Deliberative Governance.” In Governance and Public Management: Strategic Foundations for Volatile Times, edited by Conteh, Charles, Greitens, Thomas J., Jesuit, David K., and Roberge, Ian, 314. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. and Bartlett, Robert V.. 2005. Deliberative Environmental Politics: Democracy and Ecological Rationality. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. and Bartlett, Robert V.. 2009a. Global Democracy and Sustainable Jurisprudence: Deliberative Environmental Law. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. and Bartlett, Robert V.. 2009b. “Race, Poverty, and the Environment: Toward a Global Perspective.” Public Administration Quarterly 33 (4):457480.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. and Bartlett, Robert V.. 2011. “The Role of International Law in Global Governance.” In The Oxford Handbook of Climate Change and Society, edited by Dryzek, John S., Norgaard, Richard B., and Schlosberg, David, 653665. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. and Bartlett, Robert V.. 2015. Consensus and Global Environmental Governance: Deliberative Democracy in Nature’s Regime. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. and Bartlett, Robert V.. 2016. “Simulations.” In Encyclopedia of Global Environmental Politics and Governance, edited by Pattberg, Philipp and Zelli, Fariborz, 156160. London: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. and Bartlett, Robert V.. 2019. “Democracy and Climate Change: The Unfolding of Tragedy.” In Climate Futures: Re-imagining Global Climate Justice, edited by Bhavnani, Kum-Kum, Foran, John, Kurian, Priya A., and Munshi, Debashish, 145151. London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Baber, Walter F. and Bartlett, Robert V.. 2020. Environmental Human Rights in Earth System Governance: Democracy beyond Democracy. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bäckstrand, Karin. 2006. “Democratizing Global Environmental Governance? Stakeholder Democracy after the World Summit on Sustainable Development.” European Journal of International Relations 12 (4):467498.Google Scholar
Bäckstrand, Karin. 2011. “The Democratic Legitimacy of Global Governance after Copenhagen.” In Oxford Handbook on Climate Change and Society, edited by Dryzek, John S., Norgaard, Richard B., and Schlosberg, David, 669684. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bäckstrand, Karin, Khan, Jamil, Kronsell, Annica, and Lövbrand, Eva, eds. 2010. Environmental Politics and Deliberative Democracy: Examining the Promise of New Modes of Governance. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Bäckstrand, Karin, Kuyper, Jonathan, Linnér, Björn-Ola, and Lövbrand, Eva. 2017. “Nonstate Actors in Global Environmental Governance: From Copenhagen to Paris and beyond.” Environmental Politics 26 (4):561579.Google Scholar
Bacon, Christopher M., Getz, Christy, Kraus, Sibella, Montenegro, Maywa, and Holland, Kaelin. 2012. “The Social Dimensions of Sustainability and Change in Diversified Farming Systems.” Ecology and Society 17 (4):607626.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bartlett, Robert V. 1990. “Comprehensive Environmental Decision Making: Can It Work?” In Environmental Policy in the 1990s: Toward a New Agenda, edited by Vig, Norman J. and Kraft, Michael E., 235254. Washington, DC: CQ Press.Google Scholar
Baskin, Jeremy. 2019. “Global Justice and the Anthropocene: Reproducing a Development Story.” In Anthropocene Encounters: New Directions in Green Political Thinking, edited by Biermann, Frank and Lövbrand, Eva, 150168. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bauer, Steffen. 2009a. “The Ozone Secretariat: The Good Shepard of Ozone Politics.” In Managers of Global Change: The Influence of International Environmental Bureaucracies, edited by Biermann, Frank and Siebenhüner, Bernd, 225244. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Bauer, Steffen. 2009b. “The Secretariat of the United Nations Environment Programme: Tangled Up in Blue.” In Managers of Global Change: The Influence of International Environmental Bureaucracies, edited by Biermann, Frank and Siebenhüner, Bernd, 169201. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Bauer, Steffen and Weinlich, Silke. 2011. “International Bureaucracies: Organizing World Politics.” In The Ashgae Research Companion to Non-State Actors, edited by Reinalda, Bob. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Bauer, Steffen, Andresen, Steinar, and Biermann, Frank. 2012. “International Bureaucracies.” In Global Environmental Governance Reconsidered, edited by Biermann, Frank and Pattberg, Philipp, 2744. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Bavinck, Maarten and Gupta, Joyeeta. 2014. “Legal Pluralism in Aquatic Regimes: A Challenge for Governance.” Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 11:7885.Google Scholar
Beierle, Thomas. 2004. “The Benefits and Costs of Disclosing Information about Risks: What Do We Know about Right to Know?Risk Analysis 24 (2):335346.Google Scholar
Bell, Daniel. 1976. The Coming of Post-Industrial Society. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Berg, Monika and Lidskog, Rolf. 2018. “Deliberative Democracy Meets Democratized Science: A Deliberative Systems Approach to Global Environmental Governance.” Environmental Politics 27 (1):120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernstein, Steven. 2002. “Liberal Environmentalism and Global Environmental Governance.” Global Environmental Change 2 (3):116.Google Scholar
Bernstein, Steven and Hoffmann, Matthew. 2018. “The Politics of Decarbonization and the Catalytic Impact of Subnational Climate Experiments.” Policy Sciences 51 (2):189211.Google Scholar
Betsill, Michele, Benney, Tabatha M., and Gerlak, Andrea K., eds. 2020. Agency in Earth System Governance. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Betsill, Michele M. and Hoffmann, Matthew J.. 2011. “The Contours of “Cap and Trade”: The Evolution of Emissions Trading Systems for Greenhouse Gases.” Review of Policy Research 28 (1):83106.Google Scholar
Betsill, Michele M., Pattberg, Philipp, and Dellas, Eleni. 2011. “Special Issue: Agency in Earth System Governance.” International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 11 (1):16.Google Scholar
Biddle, Jennifer C. and Koontz, Tomas M.. 2014. “Goal Specificity: A Proxy Measure for Improvements in Environmental Outcomes in Collaborative Governance.” Journal of Environmental Management 145:268276.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank. 2010. “Beyond the Intergovernmental Regime: Recent Trends in Global Carbon Governance.” Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 2 (4):284288. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cosust.2010.05.002.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank. 2014. Earth System Governance: World Politics in the Anthropocene. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank. 2016. “Politics for a New Earth: Governing in the ‘Anthropocene’.” In New Earth Politics: Essays from the Anthropocene, edited by Nicholson, Simon and Jinnah, Sikina, 405420. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank and Gupta, Aarti. 2011. “Accountability and Legitimacy in Earth System Governance : A Research Framework.” Ecological Economics 70 (11):18561864.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank and Kim, Rakhyun E., eds. 2020. Architectures of Earth System Governance: Institutional Complexity and Structural Transformation. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank and Lövbrand, Eva, eds. 2019. Anthropocene Encounters: New Directions in Green Political Thinking. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank and Möller, Ina. 2019. “Rich Man’s Solution? Climate Engineering Discourses and the Marginalization of the Global South.” International Environmental Agreeements: Politics, Law and Economics 19 (2):151167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biermann, Frank and Pattberg, Philipp. 2012. “Global Environmental Governance Revisited.” In Global Environmental Governance Reconsidered, edited by Biermann, Frank and Pattberg, Philipp, 124. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank and Siebenhüner, Bernd. 2009. Managers of Global Change: The Influence of International Environmental Bureaucracies. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank, Davies, Olwen, and Grijp, Nicolien. 2009. “Environmental Policy Integration and the Architecture of Global Environmental Governance.” International Environmental Agreeements: Politics, Law and Economics 9 (4):351369.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank, Betsill, Michele M., Gupta, Joyeeta, Kanie, Norichika, Lebel, Louris, Liverman, Kiana, Schroeder, Heike, and Siebenhüner, Bernd. 2009. Earth System Governance: People, Places, and the Planet (Earth System Implementation Plan of the Earth System Governance Project). Bonn: Earth System Governance Project.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank, Bai, Xuemei, Bondre, Ninad, Broadgate, Wendy, Chen, Chen-Tung Arthur, Dube, Opha Pauline, Erisman, Jan Willem, Glaser, Marion, van der Hel, Sandra, Lemos, Maria Carmen, Seitzinger, Sybil, and Seto, Karen C.. 2016. “Down to Earth: Contextualizing the Anthropocene.” Global Environmental Change 39:341350.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bizzo, Eduardo and Michener, Gregory. 2017. “Forest Transparency without Transparency? Evaluating State Efforts to Reduce Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon.” Environmental Policy and Governance 27 (6):560574.Google Scholar
Blackstone, William. 1979 [1765–1769]. Commentaries on the Laws of England. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Bled, Amandine. 2010. “Technological Choices in International Environmental Negotiations: An Actor-Network Analysis.” Business and Society 49 (4):570590.Google Scholar
Blumstein, Sabine. 2017. “Managing Adaptation: International Donors’ Influence on International River Basin Organizations in Southern Africa.” International Journal of River Basin Management 15 (4):461473.Google Scholar
Boelens, Rutgerd and Vos, Jeroen. 2014. “Legal Pluralism, Hydraulic Property Creation and Sustainability: The Materialized Nature of Water Rights in User-Managed Systems.” Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 11:5562.Google Scholar
Bohman, James and Richardson, Henry S.. 2009. “Liberalism, Deliberative Democracy, and ‘Reasons that All Can Accept’.” Journal of Political Philosophy 17 (3):253274.Google Scholar
Bonfazi, Alessandro, Rega, Carlo, and Gazzola, Paola. 2011. “Strategic Environmental Assessment and the Democratisation of Spatial Planning.” Journal of Environmental Assessment Policy and Management 13 (1):937.Google Scholar
Bonnell, Joseph E. and Koontz, Tomas. 2007. “Stumbling Forward: The Organizational Challenges of Building and Sustaining Collaborative Watershed Management.” Society and Natural Resources 20 (2):153167.Google Scholar
Boswell, Terry and Chose-Dunn, Christopher. 2000. The Spiral of Capitalism and Socialism: Toward Global Democracy. Boulder, CO: Lynne Reinner.Google Scholar
Boughey, Janina. 2013. “Administrative Law: The Next Frontier for Comparative Law.” The International and Comparative Law Quarterly 62 (1):5595.Google Scholar
Bouteligier, Sofie. 2011. “Exploring the Agency of Global Environmental Consultancy Firms in Earth System Governance.” International Environmental Agreeements: Politics, Law and Economics 11 (1):4361.Google Scholar
Boyd, David R. 2012. The Environmental Rights Revolution: A Global Study of Constitutions, Human Rights, and the Environment. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Boyd, David R. 2017. The Rights of Nature: A Legal Revolution that Could Save the World. Toronto: ECW Press.Google Scholar
Bremer, Scott. 2013. “Mobilizing High-Quality Knowledge through Dialogic Environmental Governance: A Comparison of Approaches and their Institutional Settings.” International Journal of Sustainable Development 16 (1–2):6690.Google Scholar
Brondizio, Edwardo S., O’Brien, Karen, Bai, Xuemei, Biermann, Frank, Steffen, Will, Berkhout, Frans, Cudennec, Christophe, Lemos, Maria Carmen, Wolfe, Alexander, Palma-Oliveira, Jose, and Chen, Chen-Tung Arthur. 2016. “Re-Conceptualizing the Anthropocene: A Call for Collaboration.” Global Environmental Change 39:318327.Google Scholar
Buck, Matthias and Hamilton, Clare. 2011. “The Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equiable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization to the Convention on Biological Diversity.” Review of European Community and International Environmental Law 20 (1):4761.Google Scholar
Bührs, Ton. 2009. Environmental Integration: Our Common Challenge. Albany: State University of New York Press.Google Scholar
Buijs, Arjen, Hansen, Rieke, van der Jagt, Sander, Ambrose-Oji, Biana, Elands, Birgit, Rall, Emily Lorance, Mattijssen, Thamos, Pauleit, Stephan, Runhaar, Hens, Olafsson, Anton Stahl, and Mller, Maja Steen. 2019. “Mosaic Governance for Urban Green Infrastructure: Upscaling Acitve Citizenship from a Local Government Perspective.” Urban Forestry & Urban Greening 40:5362.Google Scholar
Burch, Sarah, Gupta, Aarti, Inoue, Cristina Y.A., Kalfagianni, Agni, Persson, Åsa, Gerlak, Andrea K., Ishii, Atsushi, Patterson, James, Pickering, Jonathan, Scobie, Michelle, van der Heijden, Jeroen, Vervoort, Joost, Adler, Carolina, Bloomfield, Michael, Djalante, Riyanti, Dryzek, John, Galaz, Victor, Gordon, Christopher, Harmon, Renée, Jinnah, Sikina, Kim, Rakhyun E., Olsson, Lennart, van Leeuwen, Judith, Ramasar, Vasna, Wapner, Paul, and Zondervan, Ruben. 2019. “New Directions in Earth System Governance Research.” Earth System Governance 1:118.Google Scholar
Burke, Anthony and Fishel, Stefanie. 2019. “Power, World Politics, and Thing-Systems in the Anthropocene.” In Anthropocene Encounters: New Directions in Green Political Thinking, edited by Biermann, Frank and Lövbrand, Eva, 87108. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Burrell, Alison. 2011. “‘Good Agricultural Practices’ in the Agri-Food Supply Chain.” Environmental Law Review 13 (4):251270.Google Scholar
Cadman, Tim, Sarker, Tapan, Muttaqin, Zahrul, Nurfatriana, Fitri, Salminah, Mimi, and Mraseni, Tek. 2019. “The Role of Fiscal Instruments in Encouraging the Private Sector and Smallholders to Reduce Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation: Evidence from Indonesia.” Forest Policy & Economics 108 (101913):110.Google Scholar
Caldwell, Lynton K. 1996. International Environmental Policy. 3rd ed. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Camilleri, Mark Anthony. 2015a. “Environmental, Social, and Governance Disclosures in Europe.” Sustainability Accounting, Management and Policy Journal 6 (2):224242.Google Scholar
Camilleri, Mark Anthony. 2015b. “Valuing Stakeholder Engagement and Sustainability Reporting.” Corporate Reputation Review 18 (3):210222.Google Scholar
Campbell-Johnson, Joey ten Kate, Elfering-Petrovic, Maja, and Gupta, Joyeeta. 2019. “City-level Circular Transitions: Barriers and Limits in Amsterdam, Utrecht and The Hague.” Journal of Cleaner Production 235:12321239.Google Scholar
Caplan, Bryan. 2007. The Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Cardoza, Benjamin. 1924. The Growth of the Law. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Carpenter, Daniel and Moss, David A., eds. 2013. Preventing Regulatory Capture: Special Interest Influence and How to Limit It. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Casella, Alessandra. 2001. “Product Standards and International Trade: Harmonization through Private Coalitions?Kyklos 54 (2–3):243264.Google Scholar
Castree, Noah. 2019. “The “Anthropocene” in Global Change Science: Expertise, the Earth, and the Future of Humanity.” In Anthropocene Encounters: New Directions in Green Political Thinking, edited by Biermann, Frank and Lövbrand, Eva, 2549. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Chan, Sandler and Amling, Wanja. 2019. “Does Orchestration in the Global Climate Action Agenda Effectively Prioritize and Mobilize Transnational Climate Adaptation?” International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 19 (4–5):429446.Google Scholar
Chan, Sander, Ellinger, Paula, and Widerberg, Oscar. 2018. “Exploring National and Regional Orchestration of Non-State Action for a < 1.5 °C World.” International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 18 (1):135152. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10784-018-9384-2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheng, Antony S. and Fiero, Janet D.. 2005. The Deliberative Democracy Handbook: Strategies for Effective Civic Engagement in the 21st Century. San Francisco: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Christoff, Peter and Eckersley, Robyn. 2013. Globalization and the Environment. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Churchill, Winston S. 1956. A History of the English Speaking Peoples. New York: Dorset.Google Scholar
Ciplet, David, Adams, Kevin M., Weikmans, Romain, and Timmons Roberts, J.. 2018. “The Transformative Capability of Transparency in Global Environmental Governance.” Global Environmental Politics 18 (3):130150.Google Scholar
Ciplet, David, Timmons Roberts, J., and Khan, Mizan R.. 2015. Power in a Warming World: The New Global Politics of Climate Change and the Remaking of Environmental Inequality. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Clapp, Jennifer. 2019. “The Rise of Financial Investment and Common Ownership in Global Agrifood Firms.” Review of International Political Economy 26 (4):604629.Google Scholar
Clapp, Jennifer and Isakson, Ryan. 2018. “Risky Returns: The Implications of Financialization in the Food System.” Development and Change 49 (2):437460.Google Scholar
Clark, Jo. 1997. Strategic Partnerships: A Strategic Guide for Local Conservation Efforts in the West. Denver, CO: Western Governors’ Association.Google Scholar
Cobb, Tanya. 2011. Reclaiming Our Food: How the Grassroots Food Movement Is Changing the Way We Eat. North Adams, MA: Storey Publishing.Google Scholar
Coleman, Sarah, Hurley, Stephanie, Koliba, Christopher, and Zia, Asim. 2017. “Crowdsourced Delphis: Designing Solutions to Complex Problems with Broad Stakeholder Participation.” Global Environmental Change 45 (1):111123.Google Scholar
Conteh, Charles, Greitens, Thomas J., Jesuit, David K., and Roberge, Ian, eds. 2014. Governance and Public Management: Strategic Foundations for Volatile Times. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Conti, Kirstin I. and Gupta, Joyeeta. 2014. “Protected by Pluralism? Grappling with Multiple Legal Frameworks in Groundwater Governance.” Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 11:3947.Google Scholar
Coolsaet, Brendan. 2015a. “Fair and Equitable Negotiations? African Influence and the International Access and Benefit-Sharing Regime.” Global Environmental Politics 15 (2):3856.Google Scholar
Coolsaet, Brendan. 2015b. “Transformative Participation in Agrobiodiversity Governance: Making the Case for an Environmental Justice Approach.” Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 28 (6):10891104.Google Scholar
Cosmides, Leda and Tooby, John. 2008. “Can a General Deontic Logic Capture the Facts of Human Moral Reasoning?” In Moral Psychololgy, Volume 1 – The Evolution of Morality: Adaptations and Innateness, edited by Sinnott-Armstrong, Walter, 51119. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Cotton, Matthew. 2013. “Deliberating Intergenerational Environmental Equity: A Pragmatic, Future Studies Approach.” Environmental Values 22 (3):317337.Google Scholar
County of San Diego Department of Agriculture, Weights and Measures. 2017. County of San Diego Crop Statistics and Annual Report. San Diego: County of San Diego Department of Agriculture, Weights and Measures.Google Scholar
Craig, Paul. 2012. EU Administrative Law. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Crawford, Neta C. 2018. United States Budgetary Costs of the Post-9/11 Wars through FY2019: $5.9 Trillion Spent and Obligated. Providence, RI: Brown University, Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs.Google Scholar
Cronin, Amanda E. and Ostergren, David M.. 2007. “Democracy, Participation, and Native American Tribes in Collaborative Watershed Management.” Society and Natural Resources 20 (6):527542.Google Scholar
Crutzen, Paul J. and Stoermer, Eugene F.. 2000. “The ‘Anthropocene’.” Global Change: International Geosphere–Biosphere Programme (IGBP) Newsletter 41:1718.Google Scholar
Curato, Nicole, Dryzek, John S., Ercan, Selen A., Hendricks, Carolyn M., and Niemeyer, Simon. 2017. “Twelve Key Findings in Deliberative Democracy Research.” Daedalus 146 (3):2838.Google Scholar
Dabbagh, Alya, Laws, Rebecca L., Steulet, Claudia, Dumolard, Laure, Mulders, Mick N., Kretsinger, Katrina, Alexander, James P., Rota, Paul A., and Goodson, James L.. 2018. “Progress Toward Regional Measles Elimination – Worldwide, 2000–2017.” Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 67 (47):13231329. http://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm6747a6.Google Scholar
Davis, Kenneth Culp. 1969. Discretionary Justice: A Preliminary Inquiry. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.Google Scholar
De Caro, Daniel A., Chaffin, Brian C., Schlager, Edella, Garmestani, Ahjond S., and Ruhl, J. B.. 2017. “Legal and Institutional Foundations of Adaptive Environmental Governance.” Ecology and Society 22 (1):778797.Google Scholar
Dellas, Eleni, Pattberg, Philipp, and Betsill, Michele. 2011. “Agency in Earth System Governance.” International Environmental Agreeements: Politics, Law and Economics 11 (1):8598.Google Scholar
Demartini, Eugenio, Gaviglio, Anna, and Pirani, Alberto. 2017. “Farmers’ Motivation and Perceived Effects of Participating in Short Food Supply Chains: Evidence from a North Italian Survey.” Agricultural Economics (Czech) 63 (5):204216. http://dx.doi.org/10.17221/323/2015-AGRICECON.Google Scholar
Dennett, Daniel. 1991. Consciousness Explained. Boston: Little, Brown.Google Scholar
Dennett, Daniel. 2003. Freedom Evolves. New York: Viking.Google Scholar
Dennett, Daniel. 2006. Breaking a Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon. New York: Viking.Google Scholar
Di Gregorio, Monica, Brockhaus, Maria, Cronin, Tim, Muharrom, Efrian, Santoso, Levania, Mardiah, Sofi, and Büdenbender, Mirjam. 2013. “Equity and REDD+ in the Media: A Comparative Analysis of Policy Discourses.” Ecology and Society 18 (2):39. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-05694-180239.Google Scholar
Diaz-Kope, Luisa and Miller-Stevens, Katrina. 2015. “Rethinking a Typology of Watershed Partnerships: A Governance Perspective.” Public Works Management and Policy 20 (1):2948.Google Scholar
Dibden, Jacqui, Potter, Clive, and Cocklin, Chris. 2009. “Contesting the Neoliberal Project for Agriculture: Productivist and Multifunctional Trajectories in the European Union and Australia.” Journal of Rural Studies 25 (3):299308.Google Scholar
Diesing, Paul. 1971. Patterns of Discovery in the Social Sciences. New York: Aldine.Google Scholar
Dingwerth, Klaus and Eichinger, Margot. 2010. “Tamed Transparency: How Information Disclosure under the Global Reporting Initiative Fails to Empower.” Global Environmental Politics 10 (3):7496.Google Scholar
Dingwerth, Klaus and Eichinger, Margot. 2014. “Tamed Transparency and the Global Reporting Initiative.” In Transparency in Global Environmental Governance: Critical Perspectives, 225247. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Dodge, Jennifer. 2014. “Civil Society Organizations and Deliberative Policy Making: Interpreting Environmental Controversies in the Deliberative System.” Policy Sciences 47 (2):161185.Google Scholar
Domingo, José. L. and Bordonaba, Jordi Giné. 2011. “A Literature Review on the Safety Assessment of Genetically Modified Plants.” Environment International 37 (4):734742.Google Scholar
Dorsch, Marcel J. and Flachsland, Christian. 2017. “A Polycentric Approach to Global Climate Governance.” Global Environmental Politics 17 (21):4564.Google Scholar
Downing, Jim. 2006. “Olive Oil Turns Golden.” Sacramento Bee, 10 May, D1.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. 1990. Discursive Democracy: Politics, Policy, and Political Science. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. 1995. “Political and Ecological Communication.” Environmental Politics 4 (4):1330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dryzek, John S. 2000. Deliberative Democracy and Beyond: Liberals, Critics, Contestations. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. 2006. Deliberative Global Politics: Discourse and Democracy in a Divided World. Malden, MA: Polity.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. 2011. “Global Democracy and Earth System Governance.” Ecological Economics 70 (11):18651874.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. 2014. “Institutions for the Anthropocene: Governance in a Changing Earth System.” British Journal of Political Science 46 (4):937956. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123414000453.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. 2016. “Institutions for the Anthropocene: Governance in a Changing Earth System.” British Journal of Political Science 46 (4):937956.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. 2017a. “The Forum, the System, and the Polity: Three Varieties of Democratic Theory.” Political Theory 45 (5):610636.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. 2017b. “The Meanings of Life for Non-State Actors in Climate Politics.” Environmental Politics 26 (4):789799.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. and Niemeyer, Simon. 2008. “Discursive Representation.” American Political Science Review 102 (4):481493.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. and Pickering, Jonathan. 2017. “Deliberation as a Catalyst for Reflexive Governance.” Ecological Economics 131:353360.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. and Pickering, Jonathan. 2019. The Politics of the Anthropocene. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S. and Stevenson, Hayley. 2011. “Democracy and Global Earth System Governance.” Ecological Economics 70 (11):18651874.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John S., Bowman, Quinlan, Kuyper, Jonathan, Pickering, Jonathan, Sass, Jensen, and Stevenson, Hayley. 2019. Deliberative Global Governance. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dupont, Claire. 2019. “The EU’s Collective Secularization of Climate Change.” Western European Politics 42 (2):369390.Google Scholar
Duyck, Sébastien. 2014. “MRV in the 2015 Climate Agreement: Promoting Compliance through Transparency and the Participation of NGOs.” Carbon and Climate Law Review 3:175187. http://ssrn.com/abstract=2557175.Google Scholar
Dworkin, Ronald. 2000. Sovereign Virtue: The Theory and Practice of Equality. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Earth System Governance Project. 2009. Earth System Governance: People, Places, and the Planet (International Human Dimensions Programme on Global Environmental Change, IHDP Report No. 20). Bonn: Earth System Governance Project.Google Scholar
Eckersley, Robyn. 2017. “Geopolitan Democracy in the Anthropocene.” Political Studies 65 (4):983999.Google Scholar
Edellenbos, Jurian, van Schie, Nienke, and Gerrits, Lasse. 2010. “Organizing Interfaces between Government Institutions and Interactive Governance.” Policy Sciences 43:7394.Google Scholar
Edwards, Gareth A. S. and Bulkeley, Harriet. 2018a. “Heterotopia and the Urban Politics of Climate Change Experimentation.” Environment & Planning D: Society and Space 36 (2):350369.Google Scholar
Edwards, Gareth A. S. and Bulkeley, Harriet. 2018b. “Urban Political Ecologies of Housing and Climate Change: The ‘Coolest Block’ Contest in Philadelphia.” Urban Studies 54 (5):11261141.Google Scholar
Elbadawi, Ibrahim and Sambanis, Nicholas. 2000. “Why Are There so Many Civil Wars in Africa? Understanding and Preventing Violent Conflict.” Journal of African Economies 9 (3):244269.Google Scholar
Ellison, Brian. 2001. “Institutional Controls and Local Autonomy in Land-Use Planning: Balancing Economic Development and Environmental Protection in Jasper County, Missouri.” State and Local Government Review 21 (1):133144.Google Scholar
Elmer, Thomas R., Lutz, Susanne, and Schuren, Verena. 2016. “Varieties of Localization: International Norms and the Commodification of Knowledge in India and Brazil.” Review of International Political Economy 23 (3):450479.Google Scholar
Elster, Jon. 2009. Alexis de Tocqueville: The First Social Scientist. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
European Council. 2000a. Presidency Conclusions, Lisbon European Council, 23–24 March 2000. edited by European Council. Brussels: European Council.Google Scholar
European Council. 2000b. Presidency Conclusions, Nice European Council Meeting, 7–9 December 2000. Brussels: European Council.Google Scholar
European Council. 2005. Presidency Conclusions, European Council Brussels, 22–23 March 2005. Brussels: European Council.Google Scholar
Falck Zepeda, José. 2006. “Coexistence, Genetically Modified Biotechnologies and Biosafety: Implications for Developing Countries.” American Journal of Ecological Economics 88 (5):12001208.Google Scholar
Feagan, Robert. 2007. “The Place of Food: Mapping Out the ‘Local’ in Local Food Systems.” Progress in Human Geography 31 (1):2342.Google Scholar
Feinberg, Matthew and Willer, Robb. 2013. “The Moral Roots of Environmental Attitudes.” Psychological Science 24 (1):5662.Google Scholar
Ferrara, Enzo. 2017. “Earth System Governance: Ruling Climate Across Society.” Electronic Green Journal 1 (40):19.Google Scholar
Finco, Adele, Sargentoni, T., Tramontano, A., Bentivoglio, Deborah, and Rasetti, M.. 2013. “Economic Sustainability of Short Food Supply Chain in the Italian Olive Oil Sector: A Viable Alternative for Tunisian Agrifood Market.” African Association of Agricultural Economists Fourth International Conference, Hammamet, Tunisia, 22–25 September.Google Scholar
Fisher, Dana R. 2013. “Understanding the Relationship between Subnational and National Climate Change Politics in the United States: Toward a Theory of Boomerang Federalism.” Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 31:769784.Google Scholar
Fishkin, James. 1995. The Voice of the People: Public Opinion and Democracy. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Fishkin, James S. 2011. When the People Speak: Deliberative Democracy and Public Consultation. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Flaherty, Martin S. 2006. “Introduction: ‘External’ versus ‘Internal’ in International Law.” Fordham International Law Journal 29:447456.Google Scholar
Flanagan, Owen, Sarkissian, Hagop, and Wong, David. 2008. “Naturalizing Ethics.” In Moral Psychology, Volume 1 – The Evolution of Morality: Adaptations and Innateness, edited by Sinnott-Armstrong, Walter, 125. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Florini, Ann. 2007. The Right to Know: Transparency for an Open World. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Florini, Ann and Jairaj, Bharath. 2014. “The National Context for Transparency-Based Global Environmental Governance.” In Transparency in Global Environmental Governance: Critical Perspectives, edited by Gupta, Aarti and Mason, Michael, 6180. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Food and Agriculture Organization. 2017. Climate-Smart Agriculture Sourcebook. 2nd ed. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.Google Scholar
Fowler, Penny and Heap, Simon. 2000. “Varieties of Participation in Complex Governance.” Public Administration Review 66 (1):6675.Google Scholar
Frank, Jason. 2007. “Aesthetic Democracy: Walt Whitman and the Poetry of the People.” Review of Politics 69 (3):402430.Google Scholar
Frantzeskaki, Niki, McPhearson, Timon, Collier, Marcus, Kendal, Dave, Bulkeley, Harriet, Dumitru, Adina, Walsh, Claire, Noble, Kate, van Wyk, Ernita, Ordonez, Camilo, Oke, Cathy, and Pinter, Laszlo. 2019. “Nature-Based Solutions for Urban Climate Change Adaptation: Linking Science, Policy, and Practice Communities for Evidence-Based Decision-Making.” BioScience 69 (6):455466.Google Scholar
Freeman, Jody. 1999. “The Real Democracy Problem in Administrative Law.” In Recrafting the Rule of Law: The Limits of Legal Order, edited by Dyzenhaus, David, 331370. Portland, OR: Hart Publishing.Google Scholar
Fremaux, Anne and Barry, John. 2019. “The ‘Good Anthropocene’ and Green Political Thinking: Rethinking Environmentalism, Resisting Eco-modernism.” In Anthropocene Encounters: New Directions in Green Political Thinking, edited by Biermann, Frank and Lövbrand, Eva, 171190. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
French, Duncan and Kotzé, Louis J.. 2019. “Towards a Global Pact for the Environment: International Environmental Law’s Factual, Technical, and (Unmentionable) Normative Gaps.” Review of European, Comparative & International Environmental Law 28 (1):2532.Google Scholar
Friberg-Fernros, Henrik and Schaffer, Johan Karlsson. 2014. “The Consensus Paradox: Does Deliberative Agreement Impede Rational Discourse?Political Studies 62 (1):99116.Google Scholar
Friedman, Benjamin. 2005. The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth. New York: Vintage Books.Google Scholar
Fuerstein, Michael. 2014. “Symposium on Consensus: Democratic Consensus as an Essential Byproduct.” The Journal of Political Philosophy 22 (3):282301.Google Scholar
Fukuyama, Francis. 2014. Political Order and Political Decay. New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux.Google Scholar
Fulponi, Linda. 2006. “Private Voluntary Standards in the Food System: The Perspective of Major Food Retailers in OECD Countries.” Food Policy 31 (1):113.Google Scholar
Fung, Archon, Graham, Mary, and Weil, David. 2007. Full Disclosure: The Perils and Promise of Transparency. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Funtowicz, Silvio and Ravertz, Jerome. 1993. “Science for the Post-Normal Age.” Futures 27 (9):739755.Google Scholar
Galaz, Victor, Österblom, Henrik, Bodin, Örjan, and Carona, Beatrice. 2016. “Global Networks and Global Change-Induced Tipping Points.” International Agreements: Politics, Law & Economics 16 (2):189221.Google Scholar
Gallemore, Caleb and Munroe, Darla K.. 2013. “Centralization in the Global Avoided Deforestation Collaboration Network.” Global Environmental Change 23 (5):11991210.Google Scholar
Gaus, Gerald. 2011. The Order of Public Reason: A Theory of Freedom and Morality in a Diverse and Bounded World. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gellers, Joshua C. and Jeffords, Chris. 2018. “Toward Environmental Democracy? Procedural Environmental Rights and Environmental Justice.” Global Environmental Politics 18 (1):99121.Google Scholar
Gerlak, Andrea K., Heilkkila, Tanya, Smolinski, Sharon K., Huitema, Dave, and Armitage, Derek. 2018. “Learning Our Way Out of Environmental Policy Problems: A Review of the Scholarship.” Policy Sciences 51 (3):335371.Google Scholar
Gerlak, Andrea K., Heilkkila, Tanya, Smolinski, Sharon K., Huitema, Dave, and Moore, Brendan. 2019. “It’s Time to Learn About Learning: Where Should Environmental and Natural Resource Governance Field Go Next?Society and Natural Resources 32 (9):10561064.Google Scholar
Gilio-Whitaker, Dina. 2019. As Long as Grass Grows: The Indigenous Fight for Environmental Justice from Colonization to Standing Rock. Boston: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Glaser, Marion and Oliveira, Rosete de Silva. 2004. “Prospects for the Co-Management of Mangrove Ecosystems on the Northern Brazilian Coast: Whose Rights, Whose Duties, and Whose Priorities?Natural Resources Forum 28:224233.Google Scholar
Glenn, H. Patrick. 2010. Legal Traditions of the World: Sustainable Diversity in Law. 4th ed. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gómez-Baggethun, Erik, Kelemen, Eszter, Martin-López, Berta, Palomo, Ignacio, and Montes, Carlos. 2013. “Scale Misfit in Ecosystem Service Governance as a Source of Environmental Conflict.” Society and Natural Resources 26 (10):12021216.Google Scholar
Goodin, Robert E. 1992. Green Political Theory. Cambridge, MA: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Goodin, Robert E. 1996. “Enfranchising the Earth and Its Alternatives.” Political Studies 44 (5):835849,.Google Scholar
Gore, Christopher. 2019. “Agency and Climate Governance in African Cities: Lessons from Urban Agriculture.” In Urban Climate Politics: Agency and Empowerment, edited by van der Heijden, Jeroen, Bulkeley, Harriet, and Certomà, Chiara, 190209. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gould, Carol. 1988. Rethinking Democracy: Freedom and Social Cooperation in Politics, Economy, and Society. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gould, Carol. 2004. Globalizing Democracy and Human Rights. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Granvik, Madeleine, Lindberg, Gunnar, Stigzelius, Karl-Anders, Fahlbeck, Erik, and Surry, Yves. 2012. “Prospects of Multifunctional Agriculture as a Facilitator of Sustainable Rural Development: Swedish Experience of Pillar 2 of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP).” Norwegian Journal of Geography 66 (3):155166.Google Scholar
Green, Jessica. 2013. “Order Out of Chaos: Public and Private Rules for Managing Carbon.” Global Environmental Politics 13 (2):125.Google Scholar
Green, Jessica. 2014. Rethinking Private Authority: Agents and Entrepreneurs in Global Environmental Governance. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Gulbrandsen, Lars. 2006. “Creating Markets for Eco-Labelling: Are Consumers Insignificant?International Journal of Consumer Studies 30 (5):477489.Google Scholar
Gulbrandsen, Lars H. 2018. “Studying Institutions for Nonstate Environmental Governance.” In A Research Agenda for Global Environmental Politics, edited by Davergne, Peter and Alger, Justin. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Gunderson, Adolph G. 1995. The Environmental Promise of Democratic Deliberation. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Gunningham, Neil. 2009a. “Environmental Law, Regulation and Governance: Shifting Architectures.” Journal of Environmental Law 21 (2):179212.Google Scholar
Gunningham, Neil. 2009b. “The New Collaborative Environmental Governance: The Localization of Regulation.” Journal of Law and Society 36 (1):145166.Google Scholar
Gupta, Aarti. 2000. “Governing Trade in Genetically Modified Organisms: The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety.” Environment 42 (4):2333.Google Scholar
Gupta, Aarti. 2004. “When Global Is Local: Negotiating Safe Use of Biotechnology.” In Earthly Politics: Local and Global in Environmental Governance, edited by Jasanoff, Sheila and Martello, Marybeth Long, 127148. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Gupta, Aarti. 2010. “Transparency to What End? Governing by Disclosure through the Biosafety Clearing-House.” Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 28 (2):128144.Google Scholar
Gupta, Aarti. 2014. “Risk Governance through Transparency: Information Disclosure and the Global Trade in Transgenic Crops.” In Transparency in Global Environmental Governance: Critical Perspectives, edited by Gupta, Aarti and Mason, Michael, 133156. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Gupta, Aarti and Mason, Michael. 2014. “A Transparency Turn in Global Environmental Governance.” In Transparency in Global Environmental Governance: Critical Perspectives, edited by Gupta, Aarti and Mason, Michael, 338. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Gupta, Aarti and Möller, Ina. 2019. “De facto Governance: How Authoritatitve Assessments Construct Climate Engineering as an Object of Governance.” Environmental Politics 28 (3):480501.Google Scholar
Gupta, Aarti, Boas, Ingrid, and Oosterveer, Peter. 2020. “Transparency in Global Sustainability Governance: To What Effect?Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning 22 (1):8497.Google Scholar
Gupta, Aarti, Andresen, Steinar, Siebenhüner, Bernd, and Biermann, Frank. 2012. “Science Networks.” In Global Environmental Governance Reconsidered, edited by Biermann, Frank and Pattberg, Philipp, 6993. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Gupta, Joyeeta and Arts, Karin. 2018. “Achieving the 1.5 °C Objective: Just Implementation through a Right to (Sustainable) Development Approach.” International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 18 (1):1128. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10784-017-9376-7.Google Scholar
Gupta, Joyeeta and Lebel, Louris. 2010. “Access and Allocation in Earth System Governance: Water and Climate Change Compared.” International Environmental Agreeements: Politics, Law and Economics 10 (4):377395.Google Scholar
Gupte, Manjusha and Bartlett, Robert V.. 2007. “Necessary Preconditions for Deliberative Environmental Democracy? Challenging the Modernity Bias of Current Theory.” Global Environmental Politics 7 (3):94106.Google Scholar
Gutmann, Amy and Thompson, Dennis. 2004. Why Deliberative Democracy? Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Haas, Peter M. 2017. “The Epistemic Authority of Solution-Oriented Global Environmental Assessments.” Environmental Science and Policy 77:221224. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2017.03.013.Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen. 1984. The Theory of Communicative Action, Volume 1: Reason and the Rationalization of Society. Boston: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen. 1993. Justification and Application: Remarks on Discourse Ethics. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen. 1996. Between Facts and Norms: Contributions to a Discourse Theory of Law and Democracy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen. 1998. The Inclusion of the Other. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen. 2001. “From Kant’s ‘Ideas’ of Pure Reason to the ‘Idealizing’ Presuppositions of Communicative Action: Reflections on the Detranscendentalized ‘Use of Reason’.” In Pluralism and the Pragmatic Turn: The Transformation of Critical Theory, edited by Rehg, William and Bohman, James, 1140. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen. 2009. Europe: The Faltering Project. Malden, MA: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Hackman, Bernd. 2012. “Analysis of the Governance Architecture to Regulate GHG Emissions from International Shipping.” International Environmental Agreeements: Politics, Law and Economics 12 (1):85103.Google Scholar
Haidt, Johathan. 2012. The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion. New York: Vintage.Google Scholar
Hall, Cheryl. 2007. “Recognizing the Passion in Deliberation: Toward a More Democratic Theory of Deliberative Democracy.” Hypatia 22 (4):8195.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Matthew and Lubell, Mark. 2018. “Collaborative Governance of Climate Change Adaptation Across Spatial and Institutional Scales.” Policy Studies Journal 46:222247.Google Scholar
Hampton, Jean. 1994. “Democracy and the Rule of Law.” In The Rule of Law, edited by Shapiro, Ian, 1844. New York: New York University Press.Google Scholar
Harden, Noelle M., Ashwood, Loka L., and Bland, William L.. 2013. “For the Public Good: Weaving a Multifunctional Landscape in the Corn Belt.” Agriculture and Human Values 30 (4):525537.Google Scholar
Hardy, Scott and Koontz, Tomas. 2009. “Rules for Collaboration: Institutional Analysis of Group Membership and Levels of Action in Watershed Partnerships.” Policy Studies Journal 37 (3):393414.Google Scholar
Hayward, Bronwyn. 2008. “Let’s Talk About the Weather: Decentering Democratic Debate About Climate Change.” Hypatia 23 (3):8198.Google Scholar
Hayward, Tim. 2005. Constitutional Environmental Rights. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hedden, Walter P. 1929. How Great Cities are Fed. Boston: D.C. Heath.Google Scholar
Helwig, Niklas. 2013. “EU Foreign Policy and the High Representative’s Capacity-Expectations Gap: A Question of Political Will.” European Foreign Affairs Review 18 (2):235253.Google Scholar
Henson, Spenser and Humphrey, Matthew. 2010. “Understanding the Complexities of Private Standards in Global Agri-Food Chains as They Impact Developing Countries.” Journal of Development Studies 46 (9):16281646.Google Scholar
Herzig, Christian. 2006. “Corporate Sustainability Reporting: An Overview.” Sustainability and Accounting 21:301324.Google Scholar
Hickmann, Thomas. 2017a. “The Reconfiguration of Authority in Global Climate Governance.” International Studies Review 19 (3):430451. https://doi.org/10.1093/isr/vix037.Google Scholar
Hickmann, Thomas. 2017b. “Voluntary Global Business Initiatives and the International Climate Negotiations: A Case Study of the Greenhouse Gas Protocol.” Journal of Cleaner Production 169:94104.Google Scholar
Hickmann, Thomas, Fuhr, Harald, Höhne, Chris, Lederer, Markus, and Stehle, Fee. 2017. “Carbon Governance Arrangements and the Nation-State: The Reconfiguration of Public Authority in Developing Countries.” Public Administration and Development 37(5):331343.Google Scholar
Hicks, Christina C. and Cinner, Joshua E.. 2014.“Social, Institutional, and Knowledge Mechanisms Mediate Diverse Ecosystem Service Benefits from Coral Reefs.” PNAS 111(50):1779117796.Google Scholar
Higham, John. 1959. “The Cult of the “American Consensus”: Homogenizing Our History.” Commentary 27 (February) 93100.Google Scholar
Hobolth, Mogens and Martinsen, Dorte Sindbjerg. 2013. “Transgovernmental Networks in the European Union: Improving Compliance Effectively?Journal of European Public Policy 20 (10):14061424.Google Scholar
Hogue, Arthur. 1966. Origins of the Common Law. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Holman, Ian P., Brown, Calum, Carter, Timothy R., Harrison, Paula A., and Rounsevell, Mark. 2019. “Improving the Representation of Adaption in Climate Change Impact Models.” Regional Environmental Change 19 (3):711721.Google Scholar
Holmes, Oliver Wendell Jr. 1991 [1881]. The Common Law. New York: Dover.Google Scholar
Huitema, Dave, van De Kerkhof, Marleen, and Pesch, Udo. 2007. “The Nature of the Beast: Are Citizens’ Juries Deliberative or Pluralist?Policy Sciences 40 (4):287311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huntington, Samuel. 1965. “Political Development and Political Decay.” World Politics 17 (3):386430.Google Scholar
Hurlbert, Margot A. and Gupta, Joyeeta. 2019. “An Institutional Analysis Method for Identifying Policy Instruments Facilitating the Adaptive Governance of Drought.” Environmental Science & Policy 93:221231.Google Scholar
Hurlbert, Margot A., Gupta, Joyeeta, and Verrest, Hebe. 2019. “A Comparison of Drought Instruments and Livelihood Capitals: Combining Livelihood and Institutional Analysis to Study Drought Policy Instruments.” Climate & Development 11 (10):863872.Google Scholar
Iancu, Bogdan. 2012. Legislative Delegation: The Erosion of Normative Limits in Modern Constitutionalism. New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Ignatieff, Michael. 2001. Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
International Maritime Organization. 2018. Adoption of the Initial IMO Strategy on Reduction of GHG Emissions from Ships and Existing IMO Activity Related to Reducing GHG Emissions in the Shipping Sector. London: International Maritime Organization.Google Scholar
Isyaku, Usman, Arhin, Albert A., and Asiyanbi, Adeniyi P.. 2017. “Framing Justice in REDD+ Governance: Centring Transparency, Equity and Legitimacy in Readiness Implementation in West Africa.” Environmental Conservation 44 (3):212220.Google Scholar
Ivanova, Maria. 2012. “Institutional Design and UNEP Reform: Historical Insights on Form, Function and Financing.” International Affairs 88 (3):565584.Google Scholar
James, Clive. 2012. Global Status of Commercialized Biotech/GM Crops 2012. Ithaca, NY: International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications.Google Scholar
Jamieson, Dale. 2014. Reason in a Dark Time. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Jansen, Kees. 2008. “The Unspeakable Ban: The Translation of Global Pesticide Governance into Honduran National Regulation.” World Development 36 (4):575589.Google Scholar
Jansen, Kees and Dubois, Milou. 2014. “Global Pesticide Governance by Disclosure: Prior Informed Consent and the Rotterdam Convention.” In Global Environmental Governance: Critical Perspectives, edited by Gupta, Aarti, 107131. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Jeffords, Chris and Gellers, Joshua C.. 2017. “Constitutionalizing Environmental Rights: A Practical Guide.” Journal of Human Rights Practice 9:136-145.Google Scholar
Jinnah, Sikina. 2014. Post-Treaty Politics: Secretariat Influence in Global Environmental Governance. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Jinnah, Sikina. 2018. “Why Govern Climate Engineering? A Preliminary Framework for Demand-Based Governance.” International Studies Review 20 (2):272282.Google Scholar
Jinnah, Sikina, Nicholson, Simon, and Flegal, Jane. 2018. “Toward Legitimate Governance of Solar Geoengineering Research: A Role for Sub-state Actors.” Ethics, Policy & Environment 21 (3):362381.Google Scholar
Jordan, Andrew, Huitema, Dave, van Asselt, Harro, and Forster, Johanna, eds. 2018. Governing Climate Change: Polycentricity in Action? New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Joseph, Jonathan. 2014. “The EU in the Horn of Africa: Building Resilience as a Distant Form of Governance.” Journal of Common Market Studies 52 (2):285301.Google Scholar
Kalfagianni, Agni. 2013. “Addressing the Global Sustainability Challenge: The Potential and Pitfalls of Private Governance from the Perspective of Human Capabilities.” Journal of Business Ethics 122 (2):307320.Google Scholar
Kalfagianni, Agni and Kuik, Onno. 2017. “Seeking Optimality in Climate Change Agri-food Policies: Stakeholder Perspectives from Western Europe.” Climate Policy 17:7292.Google Scholar
Kalfagianni, Agni and Pattberg, Philipp. 2013. “Participation and Inclusiveness in Private Rule-Setting Organizations: Does It Matter for Effectiveness?Innovation: The European Journal of the Social Sciences 26 (3):231250.Google Scholar
Kanie, Norichika, Betsill, Michele, Zondervan, Ruben, Biermann, Frank, and Young, Oran R.. 2012. “A Charter Moment: Restructuring Governance for Sustainability.” Public Administration and Development 32 (3):292304.Google Scholar
Kanie, Norichika, Betsill, Michele M., Zondervan, Ruben, Biermann, Frank, and Young, Oran R.. 2012. “A Charter Moment: Restructuring Governance for Sustainability.” Public Administration and Development 32 (3):292304. https://doi.org/10.1002/pad.1625.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Abraham. 1964. The Conduct of Inquiry. San Francisco: Chandler.Google Scholar
Karparowitz, Christopher, Mendelber, Tali, and Lee, Shaker. 2012. “Gender Inequality in Deliberative Participation.” American Political Science Review 106 (3):533547.Google Scholar
Karparowitz, Christopher, Raphael, Chad, and Hammond, Allen S.. 2009. “Deliberative Democracy and Inequality: Two Cheers for Enclave Deliberation among the Disempowered.” Politics & Society 37 (4):576615.Google Scholar
Kashwan, Prakash. 2016. “What Explains the Demand for Collective Forest Rights Amidst Land Use Conflicts?Journal of Environmental Management 183 (3):657666.Google Scholar
Kates, Robert W., Clark, William C., Robert, Corell, Michael Hall, J., Jaeger, Carlo C., Lowe, Ian, McCarthy, James J., Schellnhuber, Joachim, Bolin, Bert, Dickson, Nancy M., Faucheux, Silvie, Gallopin, Gilberto C., Grübler, Arnulf, Huntley, Brian, Jager, Jill, Jodha, Narpat S., Kaslperson, Roger E., Mabogunje, Akin, Matson, Pamela, Mooney, Harold, Moore III, Berrien, O’Riordan, Timothy, and Svedin, Uno. 2001. “Sustainability Science.” Science 292 (5517):641642.Google Scholar
Kelsen, Hans. 2006 [1949]. General Theory of Law and State. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.Google Scholar
Keohane, Robert. 2006. “Accountability in World Politics.” Scandinavian Political Studies 29 (2):7587.Google Scholar
Kerly, D. M. 2016. Historical Sketch of the Equitable Jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery. South Yarra, Victoria, Australia: Leopold Classic Library.Google Scholar
Key, Suzie, Ma, Julian K-C, and Drake, Pascal M. W.. 2008. “Genetically Modified Plants and Human Health.” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 101 (6):290298.Google Scholar
Keyes, Ralph. 2006. The Quote Verifier: Who Said What, Where, and When. New York: St. Martin’s Griffin.Google Scholar
Kim, Rakhyun E. and Mackey, Brendan. 2014. “International Environmental Law As a Complex Adaptive System.” International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 14:524.Google Scholar
Kirsop, Barbara and Chan, Leslie. 2005. “Transforming Access to Research Literature for Developing Countries.” Serials Review 31 (4):246255.Google Scholar
Kirton, John J. and Trebilcock, Michael J.. 2004. Hard Choices, Soft Law: Voluntary Standards in Global Trade, Environment and Social Governance. Burlington, VT: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Klinke, Andreas and Renn, Ortwiin. 2014. “Expertise and Experience: A Deliberative System of a Functional Divison of Labor for Post-normal Risk Governance.” Innovation: The European Journal of the Social Sciences 27 (4):442465.Google Scholar
Kloppenburg, Jack Jr., Hendrickson, John, and Stevenson, G. W.. 1996. “Coming in to the Foodshed.” Agriculture and Human Values 13 (3):3342.Google Scholar
Kolstad, Ivar and Søreide, Tina. 2009. “Corruption in Natural Resource Management: Implications for Policy Makers.” Resources Policy 34 (4):214226.Google Scholar
Koontz, Tomas M. 2014. “Social Learning in Collaborative Watershed Planning: The Importance of Process Control and Efficacy.” Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 57 (9010):15721593.Google Scholar
Kopela, Sophia. 2017. “Making Ships Cleaner: Reducing Air Pollution from International Shipping.” Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 26 (3):231242.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J. 2019. “International Environmental Law and the Anthropocene’s Energy Dilemma.” Environmental Policy and Planning Law Journal 36 (5):437456.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J. and French, Duncan. 2018. “A Critique of the Global Pact for the Environment: A Stillborn Initiative or the Foundation for Lex Anthropocenae?International Environmental Agreeements: Politics, Law and Economics 18 (6):811838.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J. and Muzangaza, Wendy. 2018. “Constitutional International Environmental Law for the Anthropocene?” Review of European, Comparative & International Environmental Law 27 (3):278292.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis K. and Kim, Rakhyun E.. 2019. “Earth System Law: The Juridical Dimensions of Earth System Governance.” Earth System Governance 1 (100003):12.Google Scholar
Kraft, Michael E., Stephan, Mark, and Abel, Troy D.. 2011. Coming Clean: Information Disclosure and Environmental Performance. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Kramarz, Teresa and Park, Susan. 2016. “Accountability in Global Environmental Governance: A Meaningful Tool for Action?Global Environmental Politics 16 (2):121. https://doi.org/10.1162/GLEP_a_00349.Google Scholar
Kramarz, Teresa, Cosolo, David, and Rossi, Alejandro. 2017. “Judicialization of Environmental Policy and the Crisis of Democratic Accountability.” Review of Policy Research 34 (1):3149. https://doi.org/10.1111/ropr.12218.Google Scholar
Krasner, Stephen. 1983. International Regimes. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Krause, Torsten, Wain, Collen, and Nicholas, Kimberly A.. 2013. “Evaluating Safeguards in a Conservation Incentive Program: Participation, Consent, and Benefit Sharing in Indigenous Communities of the Ecuadorian Amazon.” Ecology and Society 18 (4):1. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-05733-180401.Google Scholar
Kronsell, Annica and Mukhtar-Landgren, Dalia. 2018. “Experimental Governance: The Role of Municipalities in Urban Living Labs.” European Planning Studies 26 (5):9881107.Google Scholar
Lakoff, George and Johnson, Mark. 1999. Philosophy in the Flesh: The Embodied Mind and Its Challenge to Western Thought. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Landauer, Carl. 2011. “Regionalism, Geography, and the International Legal Imagination.” Chicago Journal of International Law 11 (2):557595.Google Scholar
Larson, Anne M. and Soto, Fernanda. 2008. “Decentralization of Natural Resource Governance Regimes.” Annual Review of Environment and Resources 33 (1):213239.Google Scholar
Lasswell, Harold. 1936. Politics: Who Gets What, When, How. New York: Whittlesey House.Google Scholar
Lautensach, Sabina W. and Lautensach, Alexander K.. 2014. “Environmental Security: International, National and Human.” In Routledge Handbook of Global Environmental Politics, edited by Harris, Paul G., 246258. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Leach, William D. and Pelky, Neil W.. 2001. “Making Watershed Partnerships Work: A Review of the Empirical Literature.” Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management 127:378385.Google Scholar
Lebel, Louis. 2013. “Local Knowledge and Adaptation to Climate Change in Natural Resource-Based Societies of the Asia-Pacific.” Mitigation & Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 18 (7):10571076.Google Scholar
Lebel, Louis, Grothmann, Torsten, and Siebenhüner, Bernd. 2010. “The Role of Social Learning in Adaptiveness: Insights from Water Management.” International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 10 (4):333353.Google Scholar
Lebel, Phimphakan, Lebel, Louis, Singphonphral, Darunee, Duangsuwan, Chatta, and Ahou, Yishu. 2019. “Making Space for Women: Civil Society Organizations, Gender and Hydropower Development in the Mekong Region.” International Journal of Water Resources Development 35 (2):305325.Google Scholar
Lee, Maria. 2018. “Brexit and Environmental Protection in the United Kingdom: Governance, Accountability and Law Making.” Journal of Energy & Natural Resources Law 36 (3):151159.Google Scholar
Lima, Mairon G. Bastos and Gupta, Joyeeta. 2013. “The Policy Context of Biofuels: A Case of Non-Governance at the Global Level?Global Environmental Politics 13 (2):4664. https://doi.org/10.1162/GLEP_a_00166.Google Scholar
Lin, Kuo-ming. 2014. “Deliberative Inequality: Discursive Interactions in Taiwan’s Citizen Conferences.” Taiwanese Sociology 27:150.Google Scholar
Linnér, Björn-Ola and Wibeck, Victoria. 2019. Sustainability Transformations: Agents and Drivers across Societies. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Llewellyn, Sue and Tappin, Emma. 2003. “Strategy in the Public Sector: Management in the Wilderness.” Journal of Management Studies 40 (4):955982.Google Scholar
Lövbrand, Eva and Kahn, Jamil. 2014. “The Deliberative Turn in Green Political Theory.” In Environmental Politics and Deliberative Democracy: Examining the Promise of New Modes of Governance, edited by Bäckstrand, Karin, Kahn, Jamil, Kronsell, Annica, and Lövebrand, Eva, 4764. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Lowi, Theodore. 1969. The End of Liberalism: Ideology, Policy, and the Crisis of Public Authority. New York: W.W. Norton.Google Scholar
Lubell, Mark, Schneider, Mark, Scholz, John T., and Mete, Mihriye. 2002. “Watershed Partnerships and the Emergence of Collective Action Institutions.” American Journal of Political Science 46 (1):148163.Google Scholar
Machlup, Fritz. 1962. The Production and Distribution of Knowledge in the United States. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Maciel, Carolina Toschi and Bock, Bettina. 2013. “Modern Politics in Animal Welfare: The Changing Character of Governance of Animal Welfare and the Role of Private Standards.” International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture & Food 20 (2):219235.Google Scholar
MacIntyre, Alasdair. 2006. Ethics and Politics: Selected Essays, Volume 2. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mah, Daphne Ngar-yin, Wang, Guihua, Lo, Kevin, Leung, Michael K. H., Hills, Peter, and Alex, Y. Lo. 2018. “Barriers and Policy Enablers for Solar Photovoltaics in Cities: Perspectives from Potential Adopters in Hong Kong.” Renewable & Sustainable Energy Reviews 92:921936.Google Scholar
Marion Suiseeya, Kimberly R. 2014. “Negotiating the Nagoya Protocol: Indigenous Demands for Justice.” Global Environmental Politics 14 (3):102124.Google Scholar
Martinez de Anguita, Pablo, Martin, Maria, and Clare, Abbie. 2014. “Environmental Subsidiarity as a Guiding Principle for Forestry Governance: Application to Payment for Ecosystem Services and REDD+ Architecture.” Journal of Agriculture and Environmental Ethics 27 (4):617631.Google Scholar
Mason, Michael. 2014. “So Far but No Further? Transparency and Disclosure in the Aarhus Convention.” In Transparency in Global Environmental Governance: Critical Perspectives, edited by Gupta, Aarti and Mason, Michael, 83106. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Mason, Michael. 2020. “Transparency, Accountability and Empowerment in Sustainability Governance: A Conceptual Review.” Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning 22 (1):98111.Google Scholar
Mastronardi, Luigi, Marino, Davide, Cavallo, Aurora, and Giannelli, Agostino. 2015. “Exploring the Role of Farmers in Short Food Supply Chains: The Case of Italy.” International Food and Agribusiness Review 18 (2):109130.Google Scholar
Matsumoto, Ken’ichi, Morita, Kanako, Mavrakis, Dimitrios, and Konidari, Popi. 2017. “Evaluating Japanese Policy Instruments for the Promotion of Renewable Energy Sources.” International Journal of Green Energy 14 (8):724736.Google Scholar
May, Candace. 2019. “Governing Resilience through Power: Explaining Community Adaptations to Extreme Events in Coastal Louisiana.” Rural Sociology 84 (3):489515.Google Scholar
Mburu, John and Birner, Regina. 2007. “Emergence, Adoption, and Implementation of Collaborative Wildlife Management or Wildlife Partnerships in Kenya: A Look at Conditions of Success.” Society and Natural Resources 20:379395.Google Scholar
McGeer, Victoria. 2008. “Varieties of Moral Agency: Lessons from Autism (and Psychopathy).” In Moral Psychology, Volume 3 – The Neuroscience of Morality, Brain Disorders, and Development, edited by Sinnott-Armstrong, Walter, 227257. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Meadowcroft, James and Fiorino, Daniel J., eds. 2017. Conceptual Innovation in Environmental Policy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Mees, Helen, Tijhus, Niels, and Dieperink, Carel. 2018. “The Effectiveness of Communication Tools in Addressing Barriers to Municipal Climate Change Adaptation: Lessons from the Netherlands.” Climate Policy 18 (10):13131326.Google Scholar
Mert, Ayşem. 2019. “Democracy in the Anthropocene: A New Scale.” In Anthropocene Encounters: New Directions in Green Political Thinking, edited by Biermann, Frank and Lövbrand, Eva, 128149. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Meyer, John M. 2015. Engaging the Everyday: Environmental Social Criticism and the Resonance Dilemma. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Milkoreit, Manjana. 2017. Mindmade Politics: The Cognitive Roots of International Climate Governance. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Miller, David. 1992. “Deliberative Democracy and Social Choice.” Political Studies 40 (Special Issue):5467.Google Scholar
Miller, David. 2003. “Deliberative Democracy and Social Choice.” In Debating Deliberative Democracy, edited by Fishkin, James S. and Laslett, Peter, 182199. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.Google Scholar
Miller, Joshua Louis. 2011. “A New ‘Democratic Life’ for the European Union? Administrative Lawmaking, Democratic Legitimacy, and the Lisbon Treaty.” Contemporary Politics 17 (3):321334.Google Scholar
Miller, Michael. 2006. “Biodiversity Policy Making in Costa Rica: Pursuing Indigenous and Peasant Rights.” Journal of Environment and Development 15 (4):359381.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Ronald B. 2011. “Transparency for Governance: The Mechanism and Effectiveness of Disclosure-Based and Education-Based Transparency Policies.” Ecological Economics 70 (11):18821890.Google Scholar
Mol, Arthur. 2014. “The Lost Innocence of Transparency in Environmental Politics.” In Transparency in Global Environmental Governance: Critical Perspectives, edited by Gupta, Aarti and Mason, Michael, 3959. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Monheim, Kai. 2015. How Effective Negotiation Management Promotes Multilateral Cooperation: The Power of Process in Climate, Trade, and Biosafety Negotiations. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Moore, Alfred and O’Doherty, Kieran. 2014. “Deliberative Voting: Clarifying Consent in a Consensus Process.” The Journal of Political Philosophy 22 (3):302319.Google Scholar
Morin, Jean-Frederic and Blouin, Chatal. 2019. “How Environmental Treaties Contribute to Global Health Governance.” Globalization and Health 15 (1):18.Google Scholar
Morin, Jean-Frederic and Jinnah, Sikina. 2018. “The Untapped Potential of Preferential Trade Agreements for Climate Governance.” Environmental Politics 27 (3):541565.Google Scholar
Morin, Jean-Frederic, Blumer, Dominique, Brandl, Clara, and Berger, Axel. 2019. “Kick-starting Diffusion: Explaining the Varying Frequency of Preferential Trade Agreements’ Environmental Provisions by Their Initial Conditions.” World Economy 42 (9):26022628.Google Scholar
Morseletto, Piero, Biermann, Frank, and Pattberg, Philipp. 2017. “Governing by Targets: Reductio ad Unum and Evolution of the Two-degree Climate Target.” International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 17 (5):655676.Google Scholar
Moseley, William, Schnurr, Matthew, and Kerr, Rachel Bezner. 2015. “Interrogating the Technocratic (Neoliberal) Agenda for Agricultural Development and Hunger Alleviation in Africa.” African Geographic Review 34 (1):17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19376812.2014.1003308.Google Scholar
Munaretto, Stefania and Huitema, Dave. 2012. “Adaptive Comanagement in the Venice Lagoon? An Analysis of Current Water and Environmental Management Practices and Prospects for Change.” Ecology and Society 17 (2):272288.Google Scholar
Murphree, David W., Wright, Stuart A., and Ebaugh, Helen. 1996. “Toxic Waste Siting and Community Resistance: How Cooptation of Local Citizen Opposition Failed.” Sociological Perspectives 39 (4):447463.Google Scholar
Nedergaard, Peter. 2009. “There Are Coalitions Everywhere: Coalitions and Side Payments in the Committees under the Open Method of Coordination in the European Union.” European Societies 11 (5):649671.Google Scholar
Neilson, Jeff. 2008. “Global Private Regulation and Value-Chain Restructuring in Indonesian Smallholder Coffee Systems.” World Development 36 (9):16071622.Google Scholar
Nemarundewe, Nontokozo. 2004. “Social Charters and Organization for Access to Woodlands: Institutional Implications for Devolving Responsibilities for Resource Management to the Local Level in Chivi District, Zimbabwe.” Society and Natural Resources 17 (4):279291.Google Scholar
Netting, Robert McC. 1972. “Of Men and Meadows: Stategies of Alpine Land Use.” Anthropological Quarterly 45 (3):132144.Google Scholar
Netting, Robert McC. 1976. “What Alpine Peasants Have in Common: Observations on Communal Tenure in a Swiss Village.” Human Ecology 4 (2):135146.Google Scholar
Newall, Peter, Taylor, Olivia, and Touni, Charles. 2018. “Governing Food and Agriculture in a Warming World.” Global Environmental Politics 18 (2):5371.Google Scholar
Newell, Peter and Bulkeley, Harriet. 2017. “Landscape for Change? International Climate Policy and Energy Transitions: Evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa.” Climate Policy 17 (5):650663.Google Scholar
Niemeyer, Simon. 2004. “Deliberation in the Wilderness: Displacing Symbolic Politics.” Environmental Politics 13 (2):347372.Google Scholar
Niemeyer, Simon and Dryzek, John S.. 2007. “The Ends of Deliberation: Metaconsensus and Inter-Subjective Rationality as Ideal Outcomes.” Swiss Political Science Review 13:497526.Google Scholar
Nilsson, Måns and Persson, Åsa. 2012. “Can Earth System Interactions Be Governed? Governance Functions for Linking Climate Change Mitigation with Land Use, Freshwater and Biodiversity Protection.” Ecological Economics 81:1020.Google Scholar
Nin-Pratt, Alejandro and McBride, Linden. 2014. “Agricultural Intensification in Ghana: Evaluating the Optimist’s Case for a Green Revolution.” Food Policy 153–167.Google Scholar
Nussbaum, Martha. 2000. Women and Human Development: The Capabilities Approach. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Nussbaum, Martha. 2001. Upheavals of Thought: The Intelligence of Emotion. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Nussbaum, Martha. 2006. Frontiers of Justice: Disability, Nationality, Species Membership. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Nussbaum, Martha. 2011. Creating Capabilities: The Human Development Approach. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Oberthür, Sebastian and Groen, Lisanne. 2018. “Explaining Goal Achievement in International Negotiations: The EU and the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.” Journal of European Public Policy 25 (5):708727.Google Scholar
Oberthür, Sebastian and Pożarowska, Justyna. 2013. “Managing Institutional Complexity and Fragmentation: The Nagoya Protocol and the Global Governance of Genetic Resources.” Global Environmental Politics 13 (3):100118.Google Scholar
Obradovic-Wochnik, Jelena and Dodds, Anneliese. 2015. “Environmental Governance in a Contested State: The Influence of European Union and Other External Actors on Energy Sector Regulation in Kosovo.” Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 33 (5):935949.Google Scholar
Olwig, Kenneth R. 2011. “The Earth Is Not a Globe: Landscape Versus the ‘Globalist’ Agenda.” Landscape Research 36 (4):401415.Google Scholar
Orr, Shannon K. 2013. Environmental Policymaking and Stakeholder Collaboration: Theory and Practice. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Orsini, Amandine. 2016. “The Negotiation Burden of International Interactions: Non-state Organizations and the International Negotiations on Forests.” Cambridge Review of International Affairs 29 (4):14211440.Google Scholar
Orsini, Amandine, Oberthür, Sebastian, and Pożarowska, Justyna. 2014. “Transparency in the Governance of Access and Benefit Sharing from Genetic Resources.” In Transparency in Global Environmental Governance: Critical Perspectives, edited by Gupta, Aarti and Mason, Michael, 157180. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Orts, Eric. 1995. “A Reflexive Model of Environmental Regulation.” Business Ethics Quarterly 5 (4):779794.Google Scholar
Orwin, Alexander. 2014. “Can Humankind Deliberate on a Global Scale? Alfarabi and the Politics of the Inhabited World.” American Political Science Review 108 (4):830839.Google Scholar
Ostrom, Elinor. 1990. Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ostrom, Elinor. 2005. Understanding Institutional Diversity. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Overdevest, Christine and Zeitlin, Jonathan. 2014a. “Assembling an Experimentalist Regime: Transnational Governance Interactions in the Forest Sector.” Regulation and Governance 8 (1):2248.Google Scholar
Overdevest, Christine and Zeitlin, Jonathan. 2014b. “Constructing a Transnational Timber Legaity Assurance Regime: Architecture, Accomplishments, Challenges.” Forest Policy and Economics 48 (1):615.Google Scholar
Paavola, Jouni. 2008. “Governing Atmospheric Sinks: The Architecture of Entitlements in the Global Commons.” International Journal of the Commons 2 (2):313336.Google Scholar
Page, Edward A. 2012. “The Hidden Costs of Carbon Commodification: Emissions Trading, Political Legitimacy and Procedural Justice.” Democratization 19 (5):932950.Google Scholar
Park, Susan and Kramarz, Teresa, eds. 2019. Global Environmental Governance and the Accountability Trap. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Parkinson, John and Mansbridge, Jane J., eds. 2012. Deliberative Systems: Deliberative Democracy at the Large Scale. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Parsons, Meg, Nalau, Johanna, and Fisher, Karen. 2017. “Alternative Perspectives on Sustainability: Indigenous Knowledge and Methodologies.” Challenges in Sustainability 5 (1):714. http://dx.doi.org/10.12924/cis2017.05010007.Google Scholar
Pattberg, Philipp. 2006. “Private Governance and the South: Lessons from Global Forest Politics.” Third World Quarterly 27 (4):579593.Google Scholar
Patterson, James J. and Huitema, Dave. 2019. “Institutional Innovation in Urban Governance: The Case of Climate Change Adaptation.” Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 62 (3):374398.Google Scholar
Pelizzo, Riccardo and Stapenhurst, Frederick. 2013. Government Accountability and Legislative Oversight. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Perkins, Richard. 2013. “Sustainable Development and the Making and Unmaking of a Developing World.” Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space 31 (6):10031022. https://doi.org/10.1068/c12286.Google Scholar
Petrie, Murray. 2018. “Reversing the Degradation of New Zealand’s Environment through Greater Government Transparency and Accountability.” Policy Quarterly 14 (2):3239.Google Scholar
Petts, Judith and Brooks, Catherine. 2006. “Expert Conceptualisations of the Role of Lay Knowledge in Environmental Decisionmaking: Challenges for Deliberative Democracy.” Environment & Planning A 38 (6):10451059.Google Scholar
Pinker, Steven. 2012. The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined. New York: Viking.Google Scholar
Pisupati, Balakrishna. 2007. Access to Genetic Resources, Benefit Sharing and Bioprospecting (UNU-IAS Pocket Guide). Yokohama: United Nations University Institute of Advanced Studies.Google Scholar
Pitt, Damian and Bassett, Ellen. 2014. “Innovation and the Role of Collaborative Planning in Local Clean Energy Policy.” Environmental Policy and Governance 24 (6):377390.Google Scholar
Plato, . 1952. The Dialogues of Plato. Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica.Google Scholar
Posner, Richard A. 2008. How Judges Think. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Purifoy, Danielle M. 2014. “Food Policy Councils: Integrating Food Justice and Environmental Justice.” Duke Environmental Law and Policy Forum 24 (2–3):375398.Google Scholar
Rabitz, Florian. 2018. “Regime Complexes, Critical Actors and Institutional Layering.” Journal of International Relations and Development 21 (2):300321. https://doi.org/10.1057/jird.2016.16.Google Scholar
Rabkin, Jeremy A. 2005. Law Without Nations? Why Constitutional Government Requires Sovereign States. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Rajão, Raoni and Georgiadou, Yola. 2014. “Blame Games in the Amazon: Environmental Crises and the Emergence of a Transparency Regime in Brazil.” Global Environmental Politics 14 (9):97115.Google Scholar
Rangan, Haripriya and Lane, Marcus B.. 2001. “Indigeneous Peoples and Forest Management: Comparative Analysis of Institutional Approaches in Australia and India.” Society and Natural Resources 14 (2):145160.Google Scholar
Raufflet, Emmanuel, Cruz, Luciano Barin, and Bres, Luc. 2014. “An Assessment of Corporate Social Responsibility Practices in the Mining and Oil and Gas Industries.” Journal of Cleaner Production 84:256270.Google Scholar
Rawls, John. 1971. A Theory of Justice. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Reed, Maureen G. and Abernethy, Paivi. 2018. “Facilitatiing Co-Production of Transdisciplinary Knowledge for Sustainability: Working with Canadian Biosphere Reserve Practitioners.” Society and Natural Resources 31 (1):3956.Google Scholar
Reinalda, Bob and Verbeck, Bertjan, eds. 2004. Decision Making Within International Organisations. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Reynolds, Laura T. 2012. “Fair Trade Flowers: Global Certification, Environmental Sustainability, and Labor Standards.” Rural Sociology 77 (4):493519.Google Scholar
Robertson, Chistina and Westerman, Jennifer, eds. 2015. Working on Earth: Class and Environmental Justice. Reno: University of Nevada Press.Google Scholar
Rorty, Richard. 1989. Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Rosenbloom, David. 2014. Administrative Law for Public Administrators. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Roskies, Adina. 2014. “Can Neuroscience Resolve Issues of Free Will?” In Psychology, Moral, Volume 4: Free Will and Responsibility, edited by Sinnott-Armstrong, Walter, 103126. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Rumsfeld, Donald. 2002. DoD News Briefing. In U.S. Department of Defense News Transcript. Washington, DC: US Department of Defense.Google Scholar
Runhaar, Hens, Piety, Runhaar, Bouwmans, Machiel, Vink, Simon, Buijs, Arjen, and Kleijn, David. 2019. “The Power of Argument: Enhancing Citizen’s Valuation of and Attitude Towards Agricultural Biodiversity.” International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability 17 (3):231242.Google Scholar
Runhaar, Hens, Polman, Nico, and Dijkshoorn-Dekker, Marijke. 2018. “Self-initiated Conservation by Farmers: An Analysis of Dutch Farming.” International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability 16 (6):486497.Google Scholar
Rusca, Maria and Schwartz, Klaas. 2014. “‘Going With the Grain’: Accommodating Local Institutions in Water Governance.” Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 11:3438.Google Scholar
Sabatier, Paul A., Focht, Will, Lubell, Mark, Trachtenberg, Zev, Vedlitz, Arnold, and Matlock, Marty. 2005. Swimming Upstream: Collaborative Approaches to Watershed Management. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Sarkar, A. N. 2011. “Global Climate Governance: Emerging Policy Issues and Future Organisational Landscapes.” International Journal of Business Insights and Transformation 4 (2):6784.Google Scholar
Savaresi, Annalisa. 2016. “A Glimpse into the Future of the Climate Regime: Lessons from the REDD+ Architecture.” Review of European Community and International Environmental Law 25 (2):186196.Google Scholar
Scharpf, Fritz. 1999. Governing in Europe: Effective and Democratic? New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Schlosberg, David and Craven, Luke. 2019. Sustainable Materialism; Environmental Practice and the Politics of Everyday Life. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Schroeder, Heike. 2010. “Agency in Earth System Governance: The Case of International Forest Governance.” Conference Papers – International Studies Association 1.Google Scholar
Schroeder, Heike. 2014. “Governing Allocation and Access in the Anthropocene.” Global Environmental Change 26:A1A3. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2014.04.017.Google Scholar
Schroeder, Heike and Gonzalez, Nidia. 2019. “Bridging Knowledge Divides: The Case of Indigenous Ontologies of Territoriality and REDD+.” Forest Policy & Economics 100:198206.Google Scholar
Schroeder, Heike, Boykoff, Maxwell T., and Spiers, Laura. 2012. “Equity and State Representations in Climate Negotiations.” Nature Climate Change 2 (12):834836.Google Scholar
Schuster, Monica and Maertens, Miet. 2013. “Do Private Standards Create Exclusive Supply Chains? New Evidence from the Peruvian Asparagus Export Sector.” Food Policy 43:291305.Google Scholar
Schwarze, Jürgen. 2012. “European Public Law in the Light of the Treaty of Lisbon.” European Public Law 18 (2):285304.Google Scholar
Scobie, Michelle. 2018. “Accountability in Climate Change Governance and Caribbean SIDS.” Environment, Development and Sustainability 20 (2):769787.Google Scholar
Sekhri, Sheetal and Landefeld, Paul. 2013. Agricultural Trade, Institutions, and Depletion of Natural Resources. Virginia Economics Online Papers 405.Google Scholar
Sellitto, Miguel Afonso, Vial, Luis Antonio Machado, and Viegas, Cláudia Viviane. 2018. “Critical Success Factors in Short Food Supply Chains: Case Studies with Milk and Dairy Producers from Italy and Brazil.” Journal of Cleaner Production 170:13611368. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.09.235.Google Scholar
Sen, Amartya. 1992. Inequality Reexamined. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Sen, Amartya. 2001. Democracy as Freedom. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Sen, Amartya. 2003. “Democracy and Its Global Roots: Why Democratization is Not the Same as Westernization.” New Republic, October 6, 28–35.Google Scholar
Sen, Amartya. 2009. The Idea of Justice. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Sénit, Carole-Anne, Biermann, Frank, and Kalfagianni, Agni. 2017. “The Representativeness of Global Deliberation: A Critical Assessment of Civil Society Consultations for Sustainable Development.” Global Policy 8 (1):6272.Google Scholar
Setiadi, Rukuh and Alex, Y. Lo. 2019. “Does Policy Research Really Matter for Local Climate Change Policies?Urban Policy and Research 37 (1):111124.Google Scholar
Shandas, Vivek and Barry Messer, W.. 2008. “Fostering Green Communities through Civic Engagement: Community-Based Environmental Stewardship in the Portland Area.” Journal of the American Planning Association 74 (4):408418.Google Scholar
Shane, Peter M. 2010. “Legislative Delegation, the Unitary Executive, and the Legitimacy of the Administrative State.” Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 33 (1):103110.Google Scholar
Shaw, Malcolm. 2003. International Law. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Shinn, Jamie E. 2016. “Adaptive Environmental Governance of Changing Socio-Ecological Systems: Empirical Insights from the Okavango Delta, Botswana.” Global Environmental Change 40:5059.Google Scholar
Slaughter, Anne-Marie. 2004. A New World Order. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Snell, Chelsea, Bernheim, Aude, Bergé, Jean-Baptiste, Kuntz, Marcel, Pascal, Gérard, Paris, Alain, and Ricroch, Agnès E.. 2012. “Assessment of the Health Impact of GM Plant Diets in Long-term and Multigenerational Animal Feeding: A Literature Review.” Food and Chemical Toxicology 50 (3–4):11341148.Google Scholar
Sovacool, Benjamin K. and Brisbois, Marie-Claire. 2019. “Elite Power in Low-Carbon Transitions: A Critical and Interdisciplinary Review.” Energy Research and Social Science 57:110.Google Scholar
Spruijt, Pita, Knol, Anne B., Peterson, Arthur C., and Lebret, Etik. 2016. “Differences in Views of Experts About Their Role in Particulate Matter Policy Advice: Empirical Evidence from an International Expert Consultation.” Environmental Science & Policy 59:4452.Google Scholar
Steger, Manfred B. 2001. Globalism: The New Market Ideology. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Steger, Manfred B. 2017. Globalization: A Very Short Introduction. 4th ed. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Stevens, Casey and Kanie, Norichika. 2016. “The Transformative Potential of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).” International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 16 (3):393396.Google Scholar
Stevenson, Hayley. 2016. “The Wisdom of the Many in Global Governance: An Epistemic-Democratic Defense of Diversity and Inclusion.” International Studies Quarterly 60 (3):400412.Google Scholar
Stokke, Olav. 2012. Disaggregating International Regimes: A New Approach to Evaluation and Comparison. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Sun, Daxin, Zeng, Saixing, Chen, Hogquan, Meng, Xiaohua, and Jin, Zhizhou. 2019. “Monitoring Effect of Transparency: How does Government Environmental Disclosure Facilitate Corporate Environmentalism?Business Strategy and the Environment 28 (8):15941606.Google Scholar
Sundararajan, Louise. 1995. “Echoes after Carl Rogers: ‘Reflective Listening’ Revisited.” The Humanistic Psychologist 23 (2):259271.Google Scholar
Suškevičs, Monika. 2012. “Legitimacy Analysis of Multi-Level Governance of Biodiversity: Evidence from 11 Case Studies across the EU.” Environmental Policy & Governance 22 (4):217237.Google Scholar
Sword-Daniels, Victoria, Eriksen, Christine, Hudson-Doyle, Emma E., Alaniz, Ryan, Adler, Carolina, Schenk, Todd, and Vallence, Suzanne. 2018. “Embodied Uncertainty: Living with Complexity and Natural Hazards.” Journal of Risk Research 21 (3):290307.Google Scholar
Szasz, Andrew and Meuser, Michael. 1997. “Public Participation in the Cleanup of Contaminated Military Facilities: Democratization or Anticipatory Cooptation.” International Journal of Contemporary Sociology 34 (2):211233.Google Scholar
Tallontire, Anne, Opondo, Maggie, and Nelson, Valerie. 2014. “Contingent Spaces for Smallholder Participation in GlobalGAP: Insights from Kenyan Horticulture Value Chains.” Geographical Journal 180 (4):353364.Google Scholar
Tan, Yeling. 2014. “Transparency without Democracy: The Unexpected Effects of China’s Environmental Disclosure Policy.” Governance, 27 (1):3762.Google Scholar
Tapela, Barbara N. 2008. “Livelihoods in the Wake of Agricultural Commercialisation in South Africa’s Poverty Nodes: Insights from Small-Scale Irrigation Schemes in Limpopo Province.” Development Southern Africa 25 (2):181198.Google Scholar
Tarr, G. Alan. 2001. “Laboratories of Democracy? Brandeis, Federalism, and Scientific Management.” Publius 31 (1):3746.Google Scholar
Taylor, Charles. 1985. Human Agency and Language. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Taylor, Dorceta E. 1999. “Mobilizing for Environmental Justice in Communities of Color: An Emerging Profile of People of Color Environmental Groups.” In Ecosystem Management: Adaptive Strategies for Natural Resources Organizations in the Twenty-First Century, edited by Aley, Jennifer, Burch, William R., Conover, Beth, and Field, Donald, 3367. Philadelphia: Taylor & Francis.Google Scholar
Tewari, Meenu and Pillai, Poonam. 2005. “Global Standards and the Dynamics of Environmental Compliance in India’s Leather Industry.” Oxford Development Studies 33 (2):245267.Google Scholar
Thaler, Thomas and Seebauer, Sebastian. 2019. “Bottom-up Citizen Initiatives in Natural Hazard Management: Why They Appear and What They Can Do?Environmental Science & Policy 94:101111.Google Scholar
Themnér, Lotta and Wallensteen, Peter. 2014. “Armed Conflicts, 1946–2013.” Journal of Peace Research 51 (4):541554.Google Scholar
Thiel, Andreas and Moser, Christine. 2018. “Toward Comparative Institutional Analysis of Polycentric Social-Ecological Systems Governance.” Environmental Policy & Governance 28 (4):269283.Google Scholar
Thissen, Wil, Kwakkel, J., Mens, M., van der Sluijs, J., Stemberger, S., Wardekker, A., and Wildschut, D.. 2017. “Dealing with Uncertainties in Fresh Water Supply: Experiences in the Netherlands.” Water Resources Management 31 (2):703725.Google Scholar
Thistlewaite, Jason. 2011. “Counting the Environment: The Environmental Implications of International Accounting Standards.” Global Environmental Politics 11 (2):7597.Google Scholar
Toffler, Alvin. 1991. Powershift: Knowledge, Wealth, and Violence at the Edge of the 21st Century. New York: Bantam.Google Scholar
Toje, Asle. 2008. “The Consensus-Expectations Gap: Explaining Europe’s Ineffective Foreign Policy.” Security Dialogue 39 (1):121141.Google Scholar
Torney, Diarmuid. 2019. “Climate Laws in Small European States: Symbolic Legislation and Limits of Diffusion in Ireland and Finland.” Environmental Politics 28 (6):11241144.Google Scholar
Toulmin, Stephen. 2001. Return to Reason. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Tribe, Laurence. 1988. American Constitutional Law. 2nd ed. Mineola, NY: Foundation Press.Google Scholar
Trilling, Lionel. 1965. Beyond Culture: Essays on Literature and Learning. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Turnhout, Esther, Neves, Katja, and de Lijster, Elsa. 2014. “‘Measurementality’ in Biodiversity Governance: Knowledge, Transparency, and the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES).” Environment & Planning A: Economy and Space 46 (3):581597.Google Scholar
Tyfield, David. 2012. “A Cultural and Political Economy of Research and Innovation in an Age of Crisis.” Minerva 50 (2):149167.Google Scholar
Urrutia, Isabel, Dias, Goretty M., and Clapp, Jennifer. 2019. “Material and Visceral Engagements with Household Food Waste: Towards Opportunities for Policy Interventions.” Resources, Conservation & Recycling 150:18.Google Scholar
van Asselt, Harro, and Zelli, Fariborz. 2014. “Connect the Dots: Managing the Fragmentation of Global Climate Governance.” Environmental Economics and Policy Studies 16 (2):137155.Google Scholar
van den Brandler, Francine, Gupta, Joyeeta, and Hordijk, Michaela. 2019. “Megacities and Rivers: Scalar Mismatches between Urban Water Management and River Basin Management.” Journal of Hydrology 573:10671074.Google Scholar
van der Heijden, Jeroen, Bulkeley, Harriet, and Certomà, Chiara, eds. 2019. Urban Climate Politics: Agency and Empowerment. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
van der Hel, Sandra. 2016. “New Science for Global Sustainability? The Institutionalisation of Knowledge Co-Production in Future Earth.” Environmental Science & Policy 61:165175.Google Scholar
van der Hel, Sandra. 2018. “Science for Change: A Survey on the Normative and Political Dimensions of Global Sustainability Research.” Global Environmental Change 52:248258.Google Scholar
van der Hel, Sandra, and Biermann, Frank. 2017. “The Authority of Science in Sustainability Governance: A Structured Comparison of Six Science Institutions Engaged with the Sustainable Development Goals.” Environmental Science and Policy 77:211220. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2017.03.008.Google Scholar
van der Loos, Hendrick, Kalfagianni, Agni, and Biermann, Frank. 2018. “Global Aspirations, Regional Variation? Explaining the Global Uptake and Growth of Forestry Certification.” Journal of Forestry Economics 33 (1):4150.Google Scholar
van der Ven, Hamish. 2019. “Private Accountability in Global Value Chains.” In Global Environmental Governance and the Accountability Trap, edited by Park, Susan and Kramarz, Teresa, 6386. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
van der Ven, Hamish, Bernstein, Steven, and Hoffman, Matthew. 2017. “Valuing the Contributions of Nonstate and Subnational Actors to Climate Governance.” Global Environmental Politics 17 (1):120.Google Scholar
VanDeveer, Stacy D. 2015. “Consumption, Commodity Chains, and Global and Local Environments.” In The Global Environment: Institutions, Law, and Policy, edited by VanDeveer, Stacy D. and Axelrod, Regina, 350372. Los Angeles: CQ Press.Google Scholar
Vijge, Marjanneke. 2013. “The Promise of New Institutionalism: Explaining the Absence of a World or United Nations Environment Organization.” International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 13 (2):153176.Google Scholar
Vos, Jeroen and Boelens, Rutgerd. 2014. “Sustainability Standards and the Water Question.” Development and Change 45 (2):205230.Google Scholar
Vukić, Nikolina Markota, Vuković, Renata, and Calace, Donato. 2017. “Non-Financial Reporting as a New Trend in Sustainability Accounting.” Journal of Accounting and Management 7 (2):1326.Google Scholar
Walzer, Michael. 2007. Thinking Politically: Essays in Political Theory. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Wapner, Paul. 2014. “The Changing Nature of Nature: Environmental Politics in the Anthropocene.” Global Environmental Politics 14 (4):3654.Google Scholar
Ward, John and Kaczan, David. 2014. “Challenging Hydrological Panaceas: Water Poverty Governance Accounting for Spatial Scale in the Niger River Basin.” Journal of Hydrology 519:25012514.Google Scholar
Ward, Sarah, Staddon, Chad, De Vito, Laura, Zuniga-Teran, Adriana, Gerlak, Andrea K., Schoeman, Yolandi, Hart, Aimee, and Booth, Giles. 2019. “Embedding Social Inclusiveness and Appropriateness in Engineering Assessment of Green Infrastructure to Enhance Urban Resilience.” Urban Water Journal 16 (1):5667Google Scholar
Weiner, James F. and Glaskin, Katie, eds. 2011. Customary Land Tenure and Registration in Australia and Papua New Guinea: Anthropological Perspectives. Canberra: ANU E Press.Google Scholar
Welford, Richard and Starkey, Richard. 2001. The Earthscan Reader in Business and Sustainable Development. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
West, Tom E. R. B. 2012. “Environmental Justice and International Climate Change Legislation: A Cosmopolitan Perspective.” Georgetown International Environmental Law Review 25 (1):129174.Google Scholar
Whelan, James and Lyons, Kristen. 2005. “Community Engagement or Community Action: Choosing Not to Play the Game.” Environmental Politics 14 (5):596610.Google Scholar
Whitfield, Stephen, Geist, Helmut, and Ioris, Antonio. 2011. “Deliberative Assessment in Complex Socioecological Systems: Recommendations for Environmental Assessment in Drylands.” Environmental Monitoring & Assessment 183 (1–4):465483.Google Scholar
Whitman, Darrell. 2008. “‘Stakeholders’ and the Politics of Environmental Policymaking”. In The Crisis of Global Environmental Governance: Towards a New Political Economy of Sustainability, edited by Park, Jacob, Conca, Ken, and Finger, Matthias, 163192. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Whitney, Kristoffer. 2019. “It’s About Time: Adaptive Resource Management, Environmental Governance, and Science Studies.” Science, Technology, & Human Values 44 (2):263290.Google Scholar
Wiber, Melanie, Berkes, Fikret, Charles, Anthony, and Kearney, John. 2004. “Participatory Research Supporting Community-Based Fishery Management.” Marine Policy 28 (6):459468.Google Scholar
Widerberg, Oscar and Pattberg, Philipp. 2015. Harnessing Company Climate Action beyond Paris. Study 2015: 6. Stockholm: Fores.Google Scholar
Willis, Alan. 2003. “The Role of the Global Reporting Initiative’s Sustainability Reporting Guidelines in the Social Engineering of Investments.” Journal of Business Ethics 43 (3):233237.Google Scholar
Wilson, Edward O. 1998. Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge. New York: Knopf.Google Scholar
Winkler, Harald, Höhne, Niklas, Cunliffe, Guy, Kuramochi, Takeshi, April, Amanda, and Jose de Villafranca Casas, Maria. 2018. “Countries Start to Explain How Their Climate Contributions Are Fair: More Rigour Needed.” International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 18 (1):99115. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10784-017-9381-x.Google Scholar
Wironen, Michael B., Bartlett, Robert V., and Erickson, Jon D.. 2019. “Deliberation and the Promise of a Deeply Democratic Sustainability Transition.” Sustainability 4 (1023):118Google Scholar
Wirth, David A. 2009. “The International Organization for Standardization: Private Voluntary Standards and Swords and Shields.” Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review 36 (1):79102.Google Scholar
Wohl, Ellen, Andrea, Gerlak, Poff, N., and Chin, Anne. 2014. “Common Core Themes in Geomorphic, Ecological, and Social Systems.” Environmental Management 53 (1):1427.Google Scholar
Wolff, Robert Paul. 1977. Understanding Rawls: A Reconstruction and Critique of John Rawls’s “A Theory of Justice”. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
World Health Organization. 2017. WHO Report on the Global Tobacco Epidemic, 2017. Geneva: World Health Organization.Google Scholar
Wormald, Patrick. 2001. The Making of English Law: King Alfred to the Twelth Century. London: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Young, Oran. 2017. Governing Complex Systems: Social Capital for the Anthropocene. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Young, Oran R. 1989. International Cooperation: Building Regimes for Natural Resources and the Environment. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Young, Oran R. 1998. Creating Regimes: Arctic Accords and International Governance. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Young, Oran R. 2008. “The Architecture of Global Environmental Governance: Bringing Science to Bear on Policy.” Global Environmental Politics 8 (1):1432.Google Scholar
Young, Oran R. 2010. “Institutional dynamics: Resilience, Vulnerability and Adaptation in Environmental and Resource Regimes.” Global Environmental Change 20 (3):378385.Google Scholar
Young, Oran R., King, Leslie A., and Schroeder, Heike, eds. 2008. Institutions and Environmental Change: Principal Findings, Applications, and Research Frontiers. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Zelli, Fariborz and van Asselt, Harro. 2013. “The Institutional Fragmentation of Global Environmental Governance: Causes, Consequences, and Responses.” Global Environmental Politics 13 (3):113.Google Scholar
Zelli, Fariborz, Möller, Ina, and van Asselt, Harro. 2017. “Institutional Complexity and Private Authority in Global Climate Governance: The Cases of Climate Engineering, REDD+ and Short-Lived Climate Pollutants.” Environmental Politics 26 (4):669693.Google Scholar
Zelli, Fariborz, Nielsen, Tobias, and Dubber, Wilhelm. 2019. “Seeing the Forest for the Trees: Identifying Discursive Convergence and Dominance in Complex REDD+ Governance.” Ecology and Society 23 (1):433448.Google Scholar
Zimring, Carl. 2016. Clean and White: A History of Environmental Racism in the United States. New York: New York University Press.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Walter F. Baber, California State University, Long Beach, Robert V. Bartlett, University of Vermont
  • Book: Democratic Norms of Earth System Governance
  • Online publication: 12 August 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108923651.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Walter F. Baber, California State University, Long Beach, Robert V. Bartlett, University of Vermont
  • Book: Democratic Norms of Earth System Governance
  • Online publication: 12 August 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108923651.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Walter F. Baber, California State University, Long Beach, Robert V. Bartlett, University of Vermont
  • Book: Democratic Norms of Earth System Governance
  • Online publication: 12 August 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108923651.011
Available formats
×