In this paper, we use insights derived from a critical evaluation of ecological modernisation theories to examine the origins and influence of new, market-based, forms of carbon governance. Focusing on two key examples—emissions trading in Europe and the global market in offsets—we argue that ecological modernisation theories can help us understand the processes through which the seemingly intractable problem of climate change has been reframed as an opportunity to construct a new carbon economy and anticipate some of the tensions, contradictions and limits of such an approach. We then explore the governance dimensions of these novel market mechanisms, look at how they work, and then discuss whether, to what extent and for whom they work. W...
The Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is a market-based attempt to mitigate global ...
Human induced climate change has become a prominent political issue, at both national and internatio...
Emissions trading has the potential to have undesirable financial, ethical and psychological impact...
This article argues that the analysis of the commodities exchanged on global carbon markets can help...
Markets, especially those for ‘fictitious’ commodities, are not the simple result of the gradual ext...
After initial debates and controversies, from the late 1980s onwards market instruments became fully...
The role of carbon markets in governing global carbon flows triggers substantial debates among polic...
International carbon markets have grown quickly in recent years, but have also experienced serious p...
The paper presents two interrelated sections. In the first, global carbon markets are historically c...
In the last two decades political contestation over climate change generally, and climate policy spe...
Mitigating climate change requires the collaborative and international management of a range of soci...
This paper draws upon the recent carbon market turmoil to understand how the private realm is imagin...
Mitigating climate change requires the collaborative and international management of a range of soci...
Governments increasingly rely on the use of market instruments to tackle climate change and help dec...
Mitigating climate change requires the collaborative and international management of a range of soci...
The Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is a market-based attempt to mitigate global ...
Human induced climate change has become a prominent political issue, at both national and internatio...
Emissions trading has the potential to have undesirable financial, ethical and psychological impact...
This article argues that the analysis of the commodities exchanged on global carbon markets can help...
Markets, especially those for ‘fictitious’ commodities, are not the simple result of the gradual ext...
After initial debates and controversies, from the late 1980s onwards market instruments became fully...
The role of carbon markets in governing global carbon flows triggers substantial debates among polic...
International carbon markets have grown quickly in recent years, but have also experienced serious p...
The paper presents two interrelated sections. In the first, global carbon markets are historically c...
In the last two decades political contestation over climate change generally, and climate policy spe...
Mitigating climate change requires the collaborative and international management of a range of soci...
This paper draws upon the recent carbon market turmoil to understand how the private realm is imagin...
Mitigating climate change requires the collaborative and international management of a range of soci...
Governments increasingly rely on the use of market instruments to tackle climate change and help dec...
Mitigating climate change requires the collaborative and international management of a range of soci...
The Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is a market-based attempt to mitigate global ...
Human induced climate change has become a prominent political issue, at both national and internatio...
Emissions trading has the potential to have undesirable financial, ethical and psychological impact...