Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
Pohlner, Huw
2016.
Institutional change and the political economy of water megaprojects: China’s south-north water transfer.
Global Environmental Change,
Vol. 38,
Issue. ,
p.
205.
Cao, Xun
Kleit, Andrew
and
Liu, Chuyu
2016.
Why invest in wind energy? Career incentives and Chinese renewable energy politics.
Energy Policy,
Vol. 99,
Issue. ,
p.
120.
Rogers, Sarah
Barnett, Jon
Webber, Michael
Finlayson, Brian
and
Wang, Mark
2016.
Governmentality and the conduct of water: China's South–North Water Transfer Project.
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers,
Vol. 41,
Issue. 4,
p.
429.
Alkon, Meir
2017.
All Climate is Local: How Provincial Preferences Undermine China's Coal Commitments.
SSRN Electronic Journal,
Rogers, Sarah
and
Crow‐Miller, Britt
2017.
The politics of water: a review of hydropolitical frameworks and their application in China.
WIREs Water,
Vol. 4,
Issue. 6,
Huang, Qidong
and
Xu, Jiajun
2017.
Scales of Power in Water Governance in China: Examples From the Yangtze River Basin.
Society & Natural Resources,
Vol. 30,
Issue. 4,
p.
421.
Wang, Raymond Yu
Ng, Cho Nam
Lenzer, James Hans
Dang, Heping
Liu, Tao
and
Yao, Shenjun
2017.
Unpacking water conflicts: a reinterpretation of coordination problems in China’s water-governance system.
International Journal of Water Resources Development,
Vol. 33,
Issue. 4,
p.
553.
Xiang, Xiaozhi
Svensson, Jesper
and
Jia, Shaofeng
2017.
Will the energy industry drain the water used for agricultural irrigation in the Yellow River basin?.
International Journal of Water Resources Development,
Vol. 33,
Issue. 1,
p.
69.
Moore, Scott
2018.
China’s domestic hydropolitics: an assessment and implications for international transboundary dynamics.
International Journal of Water Resources Development,
Vol. 34,
Issue. 5,
p.
732.
Moore, Scott
2018.
The political economy of flood management reform in China.
International Journal of Water Resources Development,
Vol. 34,
Issue. 4,
p.
566.
Sheng, Jichuan
Webber, Michael
and
Han, Xiao
2018.
Governmentality within China's South-North Water Transfer Project: tournaments, markets and water pollution.
Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning,
Vol. 20,
Issue. 4,
p.
533.
Habich-Sobiegalla, Sabrina
2018.
How Do Central Control Mechanisms Impact Local Water Governance in China? The Case of Yunnan Province.
The China Quarterly,
Vol. 234,
Issue. ,
p.
444.
Zhang, Hongzhou
and
Li, Mingjiang
2018.
A process-based framework to examine China’s approach to transboundary water management.
International Journal of Water Resources Development,
Vol. 34,
Issue. 5,
p.
705.
Wong, Audrye
2018.
More than Peripheral: How Provinces Influence China's Foreign Policy.
The China Quarterly,
Vol. 235,
Issue. ,
p.
735.
Wang, Raymond Yu
Liu, Tao
and
Dang, Heping
2018.
Bridging critical institutionalism and fragmented authoritarianism in China: An analysis of centralized water policies and their local implementation in semi‐arid irrigation districts.
Regulation & Governance,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 4,
p.
451.
Jiang, Ke
You, Daming
Merrill, Ryan
and
Li, Zhendong
2019.
Implementation of a multi-agent environmental regulation strategy under Chinese fiscal decentralization: An evolutionary game theoretical approach.
Journal of Cleaner Production,
Vol. 214,
Issue. ,
p.
902.
Sheng, Jichuan
and
Webber, Michael
2019.
Governance rescaling and neoliberalization of China’s water governance: The case of China’s South–North Water Transfer Project.
Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space,
Vol. 51,
Issue. 8,
p.
1644.
Moore, Scott M.
2019.
Legitimacy, Development and Sustainability: Understanding Water Policy and Politics in Contemporary China.
The China Quarterly,
Vol. 237,
Issue. ,
p.
153.
Huang, Qidong
and
Xu, Jiajun
2019.
Rethinking Environmental Bureaucracies in River Chiefs System (RCS) in China: A Critical Literature Study.
Sustainability,
Vol. 11,
Issue. 6,
p.
1608.
Zhang, Xianchun
Cheung, Darren Man-Wai
Sun, Yi
and
Tan, Jiangtao
2019.
Political decentralization and the path-dependent characteristics of the state authoritarianism: an integrated conceptual framework to understand China’s territorial fragmentation.
Eurasian Geography and Economics,
Vol. 60,
Issue. 5,
p.
548.