| Fairly sharing 1.5: national fair shares of a 1.5 A degrees C-compliant global mitigation effort |
18 |
| Land-based negative emissions: risks for climate mitigation and impacts on sustainable development |
12 |
| Countries start to explain how their climate contributions are fair: more rigour needed |
11 |
| Rich man's solution? Climate engineering discourses and the marginalization of the Global South |
11 |
| Exploring national and regional orchestration of non-state action for a < 1.5 A degrees C world |
8 |
| Halon management and ozone-depleting substances control in Jordan |
7 |
| The global stocktake: design lessons for a new review and ambition mechanism in the international climate regime |
6 |
| Enabling the IPBES conceptual framework to work across knowledge boundaries |
6 |
| The framing and governance of climate change adaptation projects in Lao PDR and Cambodia |
6 |
| A critique of the Global Pact for the environment: a stillborn initiative or the foundation for Lex Anthropocenae? |
5 |
| Evoking equity as a rationale for solar geoengineering research? Scrutinizing emerging expert visions of equity |
5 |
| Making initiatives resonate: how can non-state initiatives advance national contributions under the UNFCCC? |
5 |
| Geoengineering governance-by-default: an earth system governance perspective |
4 |
| The weakness of the strong: re-examining power in transboundary water dynamics |
4 |
| Achieving the 1.5 A degrees C objective: just implementation through a right to (sustainable) development approach |
4 |
| Governing borderless climate risks: moving beyond the territorial framing of adaptation |
4 |
| Does orchestration in the Global Climate Action Agenda effectively prioritize and mobilize transnational climate adaptation action? |
3 |
| Enhancing climate resilience of transboundary water allocation agreements: the impact of shortening the agreement's lifetime on cooperation stability |
3 |
| An institutional framework for addressing marine genetic resources under the proposed treaty for marine biodiversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction |
3 |
| A place in the Sun? IRENA's position in the global energy governance landscape |
3 |
| Youth participation and agency in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change |
3 |
| Brazil and the Paris Agreement: REDD plus as an instrument of Brazil's Nationally Determined Contribution compliance |
3 |
| Risk-sharing agreements to cover environmental damage: theory and practice |
3 |
| Mapping the fragmentation of the international forest regime complex: institutional elements, conflicts and synergies |
3 |
| Sustainability labelling as a tool for reporting the sustainable development impacts of climate actions relevant to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement |
3 |
| Climate change and developing countries: from background actors to protagonists of climate negotiations |
2 |
| Regional economic regimes and the environment: stronger institutional design is weakening environmental policy capacity of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation |
2 |
| Do deep and comprehensive regional trade agreements help in reducing air pollution? |
2 |
| The geopolitical overlay of the hydropolitics of the Harirud River Basin |
2 |
| Geoengineering: neither economical, nor ethical-a risk-reward nexus analysis of carbon dioxide removal |
2 |
| The rational design of regional regimes: contrasting Amazonian, Central African and Pan-European Forest Governance |
2 |
| The mismatch between the in-country determinants of technology transfer, and the scope of technology transfer initiatives under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change |
2 |
| The erratic behaviour of the EU ETS on the path towards consolidation and price stability |
2 |
| Market-based mechanism and climate justice': reframing the debate for a way forward |
2 |
| Effective governance of transnational adaptation initiatives |
2 |
| Knowledge-based management of protected areas and hydropower: the case of Norway |
2 |
| The self-selection of democracies into treaty design: insights from international environmental agreements |
2 |
| The role of valuation and bargaining in optimising transboundary watercourse treaty regimes |
2 |
| Environmental regime effectiveness and the North American Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement |
1 |
| Transnational municipal networks: Harbingers of innovation for global adaptation governance? |
1 |
| Deliberative multi-actor dialogues as opportunities for transformative social learning and conflict resolution in international environmental negotiations |
1 |
| How are Argentina and Chile facing shared biodiversity loss? |
1 |
| The revival of the Honourable Merchant? Analysing private forest governance at firm level |
1 |
| Nomination and inscription of the Ancient Beech Forests of Germany as natural World Heritage: multi-level governance between science and politics |
1 |
| Sharing aquatic genetic resources across jurisdictions: playing 'chicken' in the sea |
1 |
| Can the management school explain noncompliance with international environmental agreements? |
1 |
| Protecting wild land from wind farms in a post-EU Scotland |
1 |
| International environmental agreements with agenda and interaction between pollutants |
1 |
| Incorporating international biodiversity law principles and rights perspective into the European Union Timber Regulation |
1 |
| A national system of biological monitoring in the Russian Arctic as a tool for the implementation of the Stockholm Convention |
1 |