Environmental Politics

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Environmental Politics

9781781009017 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Peter Dauvergne, Professor of International Relations, Department of Political Science, University of British Columbia, Canada
Publication Date: April 2013 ISBN: 978 1 78100 901 7 Extent: 972 pp
This significant collection surveys 41 pioneering and influential articles in the field of environmental politics. It maps the historical trends and current research directions, revealing the most important debates and findings in this energetic area of scholarship. Themes covered include international agreements and state negotiations, global governance, government policymaking, environmental security, the world economy, consumption, civil society and knowledge and justice.

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Critical Acclaim
Contributors
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This significant collection surveys 41 pioneering and influential articles in the field of environmental politics. It maps the historical trends and current research directions, revealing the most important debates and findings in this energetic area of scholarship. Themes covered include international agreements and state negotiations, global governance, government policymaking, environmental security, the world economy, consumption, civil society and knowledge and justice.

This essential single volume, with an original introduction by the editor, is an indispensible tool to researchers and scholars as well as practitioners involved in this field.
Critical Acclaim
‘This is a well-chosen and accessible collection of readings. The eight thematic categories provide an engaging and thoughtful introduction to global environmental politics. Peter Dauvergne’s excellent reader will certainly become a standard text and of immense value to students and teachers.’
– Marc Williams, University of New South Wales, Australia
Contributors
35 articles, dating from 1987 to 2010
Contributors include: P.M. Haas, T.F. Homer-Dixon, S.S. Jasanoff, A.P.J. Mol, P. Newell, E. Ostrom, T. Princen, D. Vogel, P. Wapner, O. Young
Contents
Contents:

Introduction ‘The Field of Environmental Politics’

PART I REGIMES AND COOPERATION
1. Oran R. Young (1989), ‘The Politics of International Regime Formation: Managing Natural Resources and the Environment’
2. Peter M. Haas (1989), ‘Do Regimes Matter? Epistemic Communities and Mediterranean Pollution Control’
3. Carsten Helm and Detlef Sprinz (2000), ‘Measuring the Effectiveness of International Environmental Regimes’
4. Elinor Ostrom (1999), ‘Coping with Tragedies of the Commons’

PART II GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
5. Ken Conca (1995), ‘Greening the United Nations: Environmental Organisations and the UN System’
6. Jennifer Clapp (1998), ‘The Privatization of Global Environmental Governance: ISO 14000 and the Developing World’
7. David Vogel (1997), ‘Trading Up and Governing Across: Transnational Governance and Environmental Protection’
8. Robert Falkner (2003), ‘Private Environmental Governance and International Relations: Exploring the Links’
9. Michele M. Betsill and Harriet Bulkeley (2006), ‘Cities and the Multilevel Governance of Global Climate Change’
10. Peter Dauvergne and Jane Lister (2010), ‘The Power of Big Box Retail in Global Environmental Governance: Bringing Commodity Chains Back into IR’
11. Peter Dauvergne and Déborah B.L. Farias (2012), ‘The Rise of Brazil as a Global Development Power’

PART III STATE POLICY AND MODERNISATION
12. David L. Levy (1997), ‘Environmental Management as Political Sustainability’
13. William Lafferty and Eivind Hovden (2003), ‘Environmental Policy Integration: Towards an Analytical Framework’
14. Arthur P.J. Mol and Gert Spaargaren (2000), ‘Ecological Modernisation Theory in Debate: A Review’
15. Richard York and Eugene A. Rosa (2003), ‘Key Challenges to Ecological Modernization Theory: Institutional Efficacy, Case Study Evidence, Units of Analysis, and the Pace of Eco-Efficiency’

PART IV ENVIRONMENTAL SECURITY
16. Thomas F. Homer-Dixon (1991), ‘On the Threshold: Environmental Changes as Causes of Acute Conflict’
17. Daniel Deudney (1990), ‘The Case Against Linking Environmental Degradation and National Security’
18. Indra de Soysa (2002), ‘Paradise Is a Bazaar? Greed, Creed, and Governance in Civil War, 1989–99’
19. Philippe Le Billon (2001), ‘The Political Ecology of War: Natural Resources and Armed Conflict’

PART V GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
20. Peter Newell and Matthew Paterson (1998), ‘A Climate for Business: Global Warming, the State and Capital’
21. Muthukumara Mani and David Wheeler (1998), ‘In Search of Pollution Havens? Dirty Industry in the World Economy, 1960 to 1995’
22. Gareth Porter (1999), ‘Trade Competition and Pollution Standards: “Race to the Bottom” or “Stuck at the Bottom”’
23. Peter Dauvergne and Kate J. Neville (2009), ‘The Changing North-South and South-South Political Economy of Biofuels’
24. Peter Dauvergne and Kate J. Neville (2010), ‘Forests, Food, and Fuel in the Tropics: The Uneven Social and Ecological Consequences of the Emerging Political Economy of Biofuels’
25. Kate J. Neville and Peter Dauvergne (2012), ‘Biofuels and the Politics of Mapmaking’

PART VI CONSUMPTION
26. Thomas Princen (1999), ‘Consumption and Environment: Some Conceptual Issues’
27. Michael F. Maniates (2001), ‘Individualization: Plant a Tree, Buy a Bike, Save the World?’
28. Kersty Hobson (2002), ‘Competing Discourses of Sustainable Consumption: Does the ‘Rationalisation of Lifestyles’ Make Sense?’
29. Doris A. Fuchs and Sylvia Lorek (2005), ‘Sustainable Consumption Governance: A History of Promises and Failures’
30. Peter Dauvergne (2010), ‘The Problem of Consumption’
31. Peter Dauvergne and Jane Lister (2010), ‘The Prospects and Limits of Eco-Consumerism: Shopping Our Way to Less Deforestation?’
32. Peter Dauvergne and Jane Lister (2012), ‘Big Brand Sustainability: Governance Prospects and Environmental Limits’

PART VII CIVIL SOCIETY AND NGOS
33. Paul Wapner (1995), ‘Politics Beyond the State: Environmental Activism and World Civic Politics’
34. Ann Marie Clark, Elisabeth J. Friedman and Kathryn Hochstetler (1998), ‘The Sovereign Limits of Global Civil Society: A Comparison of NGO Participation in UN Conferences on the Environment, Human Rights and Women’
35. Ranjit Dwivedi (2001), ‘Environmental Movements in the Global South: Issues of Livelihood and Beyond’
36. Michele M. Betsill and Elisabeth Corell (2001), ‘NGO Influence in International Environmental Negotiations: A Framework for Analysis’
37. Peter Dauvergne and Kate J. Neville (2011), ‘Mindbombs of Right and Wrong: Cycles of Contention in the Activist Campaign to Stop Canada''s Seal Hunt’

PART VIII KNOWLEDGE AND JUSTICE
38. Sheila S. Jasanoff (1987), ‘Contested Boundaries in Policy-Relevant Science’
39. Karin Bäckstrand (2003), ‘Civic Science for Sustainability: Reframing the Role of Experts, Policy-Makers and Citizens in Environmental Governance’
40. Michael R. Dove (2006), ‘Indigenous People and Environmental Politics’
41. David Schlosberg, (2004), ‘Reconceiving Environmental Justice: Global Movements and Political Theories’

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