This introductory article draws on the contributions to this special issue to consider the implications of a transparency turn in global environmental and sustainability governance. Three interrelated aspects are addressed: why transparency now? How is transparency being institutionalized? And what effects does it have? In analyzing the spread of transparency in governance, the article highlights the broader (contested) normative context that shapes both its embrace by various actors and its institutionalization. I argue that the effects of transparency-whether it informs, empowers or improves environmental performance-remain uneven, with transparency falling short of meeting the ends many anticipate from it. Nonetheless, as the contributio...
Transparency is increasingly evoked within public and private climate governance arrangements as a k...
The rise of “new” transnational governance has intensified debates about a lack of accountability in...
Beginning in the early 1990s, non-state actors have taken over a wide range of governance functions ...
This introductory article draws on the contributions to this special issue to consider the implicati...
Transparency in environmental governance is no longer an uncontroversial answer to problems of accou...
Increased transparency has emerged in recent years as a key objective of those seeking to design the...
Although transparency is a key concept of our times, it remains a relatively understudied phenomenon...
Transparency—openness, secured through greater availability of information—is increasingly seen as p...
Although transparency is a key concept of our times, it remains a relatively understudied phenomenon...
Transparency—openness, secured through greater availability of information—is increasingly seen as p...
Transparency is increasingly evoked within public and private climate governance arrangements as a k...
The growing attention to transparency is not an accidental and fashionable wave, soon to be replaced...
Transparency-based global environmental governance, like all global governance, necessarily plays ou...
Information disclosure is the most obvious manifestation of the transparency turn in global governan...
First published: 28 February 2019The rise of "new" transnational governance has intensified debates ...
Transparency is increasingly evoked within public and private climate governance arrangements as a k...
The rise of “new” transnational governance has intensified debates about a lack of accountability in...
Beginning in the early 1990s, non-state actors have taken over a wide range of governance functions ...
This introductory article draws on the contributions to this special issue to consider the implicati...
Transparency in environmental governance is no longer an uncontroversial answer to problems of accou...
Increased transparency has emerged in recent years as a key objective of those seeking to design the...
Although transparency is a key concept of our times, it remains a relatively understudied phenomenon...
Transparency—openness, secured through greater availability of information—is increasingly seen as p...
Although transparency is a key concept of our times, it remains a relatively understudied phenomenon...
Transparency—openness, secured through greater availability of information—is increasingly seen as p...
Transparency is increasingly evoked within public and private climate governance arrangements as a k...
The growing attention to transparency is not an accidental and fashionable wave, soon to be replaced...
Transparency-based global environmental governance, like all global governance, necessarily plays ou...
Information disclosure is the most obvious manifestation of the transparency turn in global governan...
First published: 28 February 2019The rise of "new" transnational governance has intensified debates ...
Transparency is increasingly evoked within public and private climate governance arrangements as a k...
The rise of “new” transnational governance has intensified debates about a lack of accountability in...
Beginning in the early 1990s, non-state actors have taken over a wide range of governance functions ...