In 2005, after Congress failed to ratify the Kyoto Protocol, many American cities stepped up their efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. However, by 2012, these efforts had fallen off, only two years after their peak. In new research, Rachel Krause writes that many cities decided to abandon their climate protection commitments because of the influence of mainstream political conservatism, and that this effect was more likely for cities which had achieved fewer environmental milestones
The political differences we see on climate issues globally reflect different cultures and distinct ...
Around the world, cities have committed themselves to urban climate action strategies with targets t...
Many observers perceive the US as an obstructionist force in global efforts to address greenhouse ga...
As nation states equivocate over meaningful climate change agreements, hundreds of cities worldwide ...
As the recent Supreme Court decision on Obama’s climate regulations have illustrated, climate action...
Current research indicates that the potential risks associated with human-induced climate change are...
With the U.S. federal government stepping away from climate change, a number of cities have indicate...
In the absence of strong U.S. national climate change policy, California and New York, among other s...
This is the final version. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.City governments ...
In the absence of federally-mandated climate change regulations in the United States, many municipal...
A growing partisan divide in Congress stalled almost all new federal climate policy in 2011. The div...
Climate change and thus low-carbon transitions are global challenges, which require commitment and e...
Little quantitative research has been devoted to voluntary climate actions at the local level in com...
Spring 2007 was a heady time for climate advocates. The fourth report of the Intergovernmental Panel...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer Verlag via the ...
The political differences we see on climate issues globally reflect different cultures and distinct ...
Around the world, cities have committed themselves to urban climate action strategies with targets t...
Many observers perceive the US as an obstructionist force in global efforts to address greenhouse ga...
As nation states equivocate over meaningful climate change agreements, hundreds of cities worldwide ...
As the recent Supreme Court decision on Obama’s climate regulations have illustrated, climate action...
Current research indicates that the potential risks associated with human-induced climate change are...
With the U.S. federal government stepping away from climate change, a number of cities have indicate...
In the absence of strong U.S. national climate change policy, California and New York, among other s...
This is the final version. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.City governments ...
In the absence of federally-mandated climate change regulations in the United States, many municipal...
A growing partisan divide in Congress stalled almost all new federal climate policy in 2011. The div...
Climate change and thus low-carbon transitions are global challenges, which require commitment and e...
Little quantitative research has been devoted to voluntary climate actions at the local level in com...
Spring 2007 was a heady time for climate advocates. The fourth report of the Intergovernmental Panel...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer Verlag via the ...
The political differences we see on climate issues globally reflect different cultures and distinct ...
Around the world, cities have committed themselves to urban climate action strategies with targets t...
Many observers perceive the US as an obstructionist force in global efforts to address greenhouse ga...