This article uses the lens of accountability to explore the shifting strategies of a range of civil society groups in their engagement with key actors in the global regime on climate change. It first reviews traditional strategies aimed at increasing the ‘public accountability’ of governments and UN bodies for agreed actions on climate change. This approach is then compared with the growing tendency to pursue the accountability of private corporations with respect to climate change. These strategies aim, among other things, to promote ‘civil regulation’: that is, governance of the private sector through civil society oversight. The final part of the article reflects on the possibilities and limitations of civil society actors performing suc...
Polycentricity is characterised by institutional fragmentation as well as a new quality of interdepe...
The capacity of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to encourage public engagement with climate pr...
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned in its most recent Assessment Report tha...
This article uses the lens of accountability to explore the shifting strategies of a range of civil ...
How does civil society engage in climate governance and how do we understand the range of forms and ...
This chapter explains how the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), an imp...
PurposeThe increasing responsibility of organisations towards society and the environment has invert...
There is general agreement across the world that human-made climate change is a serious global probl...
This paper uses a mixed method approach to analyze the accountability regime of the largest global c...
Addressing global climate change brings up a number of priority issues. The fundamental issue is the...
As climate change litigation proliferates around the world, an assessment of what its role is and sh...
The rapid growth in carbon disclosure in recent years represents a major success in the struggle to ...
International audienceEnvironment can be protected through Corporate Social Responsibility, as provi...
This article discusses challenges to accountability in the context of transnational climate governan...
Polycentricity is characterised by institutional fragmentation as well as a new quality of interdepe...
The capacity of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to encourage public engagement with climate pr...
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned in its most recent Assessment Report tha...
This article uses the lens of accountability to explore the shifting strategies of a range of civil ...
How does civil society engage in climate governance and how do we understand the range of forms and ...
This chapter explains how the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), an imp...
PurposeThe increasing responsibility of organisations towards society and the environment has invert...
There is general agreement across the world that human-made climate change is a serious global probl...
This paper uses a mixed method approach to analyze the accountability regime of the largest global c...
Addressing global climate change brings up a number of priority issues. The fundamental issue is the...
As climate change litigation proliferates around the world, an assessment of what its role is and sh...
The rapid growth in carbon disclosure in recent years represents a major success in the struggle to ...
International audienceEnvironment can be protected through Corporate Social Responsibility, as provi...
This article discusses challenges to accountability in the context of transnational climate governan...
Polycentricity is characterised by institutional fragmentation as well as a new quality of interdepe...
The capacity of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to encourage public engagement with climate pr...
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned in its most recent Assessment Report tha...