The financing of climate measures in developing countries – climate finance – is an increasingly important issue in global climate governance. While a growing body of literature has highlighted the importance of bureaucratic actors within governments as a factor influencing political decisions, quantitative studies on climate finance have so far only focused on extra-governmental factors. We argue that this is a serious shortcoming given that the allocation of climate finance involves ministries with different priorities. This paper addresses the gap by studying how the involvement of ministries in policy processes influences the implementation of bilateral climate finance. We find that ministry involvement matters for both the selection and alloca...
Under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, industrialized countries have agree...
Climate change is a global crisis that requires countries to act on both domestic and international ...
Abstract: The apparent mismatch between countries receiving Adaptation-related Climate Change Financ...
Developed countries have relied heavily on aid budgets to fulfill their pledges to boost funding for...
Developed countries have relied heavily on aid budgets to fulfill their pledges to boost funding for...
Climate change is a global threat that requires policy action on all levels of governance. The 2015 ...
Social scientists are increasingly interested in the processes that give shape to global policy solu...
Scholars have recently devoted increasing attention to the role and function of international bureau...
Finance ministries are increasingly involved in UN climate finance negotiations,yet this development...
At the 2009 Copenhagen Climate Summit, donors pledged to ‘jointly mobilize’ $100 billion/year for cl...
Non-state and sub-national actors (e.g. companies, civil society, cities and regions, collectively r...
My research asks how and why some developing countries have adopted ambitious climate policies, w...
Formally adopting climate change mitigation policies does not necessarily translate to tangible chan...
Under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, industrialized countries have agree...
Climate change is a global crisis that requires countries to act on both domestic and international ...
Abstract: The apparent mismatch between countries receiving Adaptation-related Climate Change Financ...
Developed countries have relied heavily on aid budgets to fulfill their pledges to boost funding for...
Developed countries have relied heavily on aid budgets to fulfill their pledges to boost funding for...
Climate change is a global threat that requires policy action on all levels of governance. The 2015 ...
Social scientists are increasingly interested in the processes that give shape to global policy solu...
Scholars have recently devoted increasing attention to the role and function of international bureau...
Finance ministries are increasingly involved in UN climate finance negotiations,yet this development...
At the 2009 Copenhagen Climate Summit, donors pledged to ‘jointly mobilize’ $100 billion/year for cl...
Non-state and sub-national actors (e.g. companies, civil society, cities and regions, collectively r...
My research asks how and why some developing countries have adopted ambitious climate policies, w...
Formally adopting climate change mitigation policies does not necessarily translate to tangible chan...
Under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, industrialized countries have agree...
Climate change is a global crisis that requires countries to act on both domestic and international ...
Abstract: The apparent mismatch between countries receiving Adaptation-related Climate Change Financ...