The Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is often cited as an exemplar of new, hybrid forms of global environmental governance operating at the public–private interface. Practically, enacting this arrangement involves a wide range of non-state actors. This broad involvement is here assumed to mark a shift towards more polycentric and networked modes of governance in which agents collaborate as ‘stakeholders’ in the process of consensual rule-setting and implementation. Using post-political critique, the depoliticising effects of the stakeholder framework on civil society actors are interrogated, using formal and informal participation opportunities to raise concerns regarding specific CDM projects. The analysis suggests that t...
This article studies the Kyoto Protocol’s CDM as an example of hybrid governance, involving both pub...
Non-governmental organizations play an increasingly important role in the formation and implementati...
One of the most pressing problems confronting political scientists today is whether global governanc...
The Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is often cited as an exemplar of new, hybrid ...
Following a deliberative shift towards public–private partnership networks in global environmental g...
Following a deliberative shift towards public–private partnership networks in global environmental g...
It is commonly argued that the private sector needs to become actively involved for society to stand...
Granting greater access to civil society actors in international institutional venues is widely perc...
How does civil society engage in climate governance and how do we understand the range of forms and ...
The clean development mechanism (CDM), outlined in Article 12 of the Kyoto Protocol (UNFCCC 1997) is...
Global agreements have proliferated in the past ten years. One of these is the Kyoto Protocol, which...
Global agreements have proliferated in the past ten years. One of these is the Kyoto Protocol, which...
The Clean Development Mechanism operates on a multilevel and constantly evolving normative basis. It...
The Clean Development Mechanism operates on a multilevel and constantly evolving normative basis. It...
The Clean Development Mechanism operates on a multilevel and constantly evolving normative basis. It...
This article studies the Kyoto Protocol’s CDM as an example of hybrid governance, involving both pub...
Non-governmental organizations play an increasingly important role in the formation and implementati...
One of the most pressing problems confronting political scientists today is whether global governanc...
The Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is often cited as an exemplar of new, hybrid ...
Following a deliberative shift towards public–private partnership networks in global environmental g...
Following a deliberative shift towards public–private partnership networks in global environmental g...
It is commonly argued that the private sector needs to become actively involved for society to stand...
Granting greater access to civil society actors in international institutional venues is widely perc...
How does civil society engage in climate governance and how do we understand the range of forms and ...
The clean development mechanism (CDM), outlined in Article 12 of the Kyoto Protocol (UNFCCC 1997) is...
Global agreements have proliferated in the past ten years. One of these is the Kyoto Protocol, which...
Global agreements have proliferated in the past ten years. One of these is the Kyoto Protocol, which...
The Clean Development Mechanism operates on a multilevel and constantly evolving normative basis. It...
The Clean Development Mechanism operates on a multilevel and constantly evolving normative basis. It...
The Clean Development Mechanism operates on a multilevel and constantly evolving normative basis. It...
This article studies the Kyoto Protocol’s CDM as an example of hybrid governance, involving both pub...
Non-governmental organizations play an increasingly important role in the formation and implementati...
One of the most pressing problems confronting political scientists today is whether global governanc...