Abstract: This article consists of a critical review of the conceptual scholarship on the governance of climate finance and includes an overview of the institutional arrangements and governance logics that provide climate finance. New decentralized, polycentric structures allow for climate finance to more effectively reach the sub- and non-state actors most directly implementing climate change governance. However, the expansion of climate finance into market-inflected forms of blended finance, as well as debt-based financing, express a neoliberal logic that shifts power to market actors. This may challenge the efficacy of climate finance. We suggest that further research is needed on polycentric systems in climate finance, since an apparent...
Climate change poses a singular threat to humanity, and to The Rockefeller Foundation's 109-year mis...
Climate change cannot be addressed unless developed and developing countries alike invest heavily in...
In this article I canvass four kinds or ‘modes’ of ungovernance, which I characterise as agnostic, e...
Formal deliberations for the new collective quantified goal on climate finance began at COP26 in Gla...
This article studies how institutional dynamics might affect the implementation of climate-related f...
Award date: 17 June 2022. Supervisor: Professor George Papakonstantinou, European University Institu...
Climate finance is at the heart of addressing climate change. To limit the temperature rise to 1.5 d...
\u27Climate finance\u27 is becoming an important feature of the emerging legal and policy regimes to...
In recent years, private and public financial institutions have increasingly focused on addressing t...
This article looks at the current climate finance architecture and its impact on developing countrie...
This brief explains CPI’s understanding and definition of key climate finance terms and the reasons ...
Finance scholars are only recently attempting to bridge the gap in climate finance. This paper is es...
This thesis asked two research questions: 1) how are the Climate Disclosure Standards Board (CDSB) a...
A global transition to a low-carbon and climate resilient world will require trillions of dollars of...
This paper provides novel evidence on the climate financing practices of Multilateral Development Ba...
Climate change poses a singular threat to humanity, and to The Rockefeller Foundation's 109-year mis...
Climate change cannot be addressed unless developed and developing countries alike invest heavily in...
In this article I canvass four kinds or ‘modes’ of ungovernance, which I characterise as agnostic, e...
Formal deliberations for the new collective quantified goal on climate finance began at COP26 in Gla...
This article studies how institutional dynamics might affect the implementation of climate-related f...
Award date: 17 June 2022. Supervisor: Professor George Papakonstantinou, European University Institu...
Climate finance is at the heart of addressing climate change. To limit the temperature rise to 1.5 d...
\u27Climate finance\u27 is becoming an important feature of the emerging legal and policy regimes to...
In recent years, private and public financial institutions have increasingly focused on addressing t...
This article looks at the current climate finance architecture and its impact on developing countrie...
This brief explains CPI’s understanding and definition of key climate finance terms and the reasons ...
Finance scholars are only recently attempting to bridge the gap in climate finance. This paper is es...
This thesis asked two research questions: 1) how are the Climate Disclosure Standards Board (CDSB) a...
A global transition to a low-carbon and climate resilient world will require trillions of dollars of...
This paper provides novel evidence on the climate financing practices of Multilateral Development Ba...
Climate change poses a singular threat to humanity, and to The Rockefeller Foundation's 109-year mis...
Climate change cannot be addressed unless developed and developing countries alike invest heavily in...
In this article I canvass four kinds or ‘modes’ of ungovernance, which I characterise as agnostic, e...