| Charting knowledge co-production pathways in climate and development |
10 |
| Collaborative Governance for Climate Change Adaptation: Mapping citizen-municipality interactions |
9 |
| Reconsidering EU Compliance: Implementation performance in the field of environmental policy |
8 |
| From citizen participation to government participation: An exploration of the roles of local governments in community initiatives for climate change adaptation in the Netherlands |
8 |
| Polycentric struggles: The experience of the global climate justice movement |
7 |
| Transforming urban water governance through social (triple-loop) learning |
7 |
| Towards an evidence base on the value of social learning-oriented approaches in the context of climate change and food security |
6 |
| Governance of zero deforestation cocoa in West Africa: New forms of public-private interaction |
6 |
| Investigating patterns of local climate governance: How low-carbon municipalities and intentional communities intervene in social practices |
4 |
| Deconstructing the policyscape for reducing deforestation in the Eastern Amazon: Practical insights for a landscape approach |
4 |
| Urban climate change adaptation as social learning: Exploring the process and politics |
4 |
| Why the path to polycentricity matters: evidence from fisheries governance in Palau |
4 |
| Collective action in a polycentric water governance system |
4 |
| The lens of polycentricity: Identifying polycentric governance systems illustrated through examples from the field of water governance |
4 |
| Polycentricity in the water-energy nexus: A comparison of polycentric governance traits and implications for adaptive capacity of water user associations in Spain |
4 |
| (De-)Constructing coherence? Strategic entrepreneurs, policy frames and the integration of climate and energy policies in the European Union |
4 |
| Horizontal policy coherence starts with problem definition: Unpacking the EU integrated energy-climate approach |
4 |
| Breaking bad: When does polycentricity lead to maladaptation rather than adaptation? |
3 |
| Mainstreaming across political sectors: Assessing biodiversity policy integration in Peru |
3 |
| Why popular support tools on climate change adaptation have difficulties in reaching local policy-makers: Qualitative insights from the UK and Germany |
3 |
| Actor relations in climate policymaking: Governing decarbonisation in a corporatist green state |
3 |
| Ecosystem services and multifunctional agriculture: Unravelling informal stakeholders' perceptions and water governance in three European irrigation systems |
3 |
| Corporate reporting and conservation realities: Understanding differences in what businesses say and do regarding biodiversity |
3 |
| Environmental policy impacts of trade with China and the moderating effect of governance |
3 |
| Why are Material Efficiency Solutions a Limited Part of the Climate Policy Agenda? An application of the Multiple Streams Framework to UK policy on CO2 emissions from cars |
3 |
| Understanding Input and Output Legitimacy of Environmental Policymaking in The Gulf Cooperation Council States |
3 |
| Flood Governance: A multiple country comparison of stakeholder perceptions and aspirations |
3 |
| Legitimate planning processes or informed decisions? Exploring public officials' rationales for participation in regional green infrastructure planning in Estonia |
3 |
| An Approach to Assess Learning Conditions, Effects and Outcomes in Environmental Governance |
2 |
| Municipalities as Frontrunners in Mitigation of Climate Change: Does soft regulation make a difference? |
2 |
| Protecting and Restoring Biodiversity across the Freshwater, Coastal and Marine Realms: Is the existing EU policy framework fit for purpose? |
2 |
| The influence of the fossil fuel and emission-intensive industries on the stringency of mitigation policies: Evidence from the OECD countries and Brazil, Russia, India, Indonesia, China and South Africa |
2 |
| Actor perceptions of polycentricity in wind power governance |
2 |
| A discursive-institutional perspective on transformative governance: A case from a fire management policy sector |
2 |
| What affects government planning for climate change adaptation: Evidence from the US states |
2 |
| Changing the record: Narrative policy analysis and the politics of emissions trading in New Zealand |
2 |
| Local energy agencies and cities' participation in translocal climate governance |
2 |
| Landscape-scale biodiversity governance: Scenarios for reshaping spaces of governance |
2 |
| Beyond inputs and outputs: Process-oriented explanation of institutional change in climate adaptation governance |
2 |
| Institutional externalities and actor performance in polycentric governance systems |
2 |
| A semiautomated approach to analyzing polycentricity |
2 |
| Analyzing the coexistence of conflict and cooperation in a regional delta management system: Tidal River Management (TRM) in the Bangladesh delta |
2 |
| Policy coherence and organizational cultures: Energy efficiency and greenhouse gas reduction targets |
2 |
| Policy coherence by subterfuge? Arenas and compromise-building in the European Union's energy efficiency policy |
1 |
| Toward comparative institutional analysis of polycentric social-ecological systems governance |
1 |
| Two Sustainability Epistemologies in the Marketization of a Natural Resource |
1 |
| Governing for sustainability: How research on large and complex systems can inform governance and institutional theory |
1 |
| Addressing the gap between participatory ideals and the reality of environmental management: The case of the cormorant population in Finland |
1 |
| Ecological stakeholder analogs as intermediaries between freshwater biodiversity conservation and sustainable water management |
1 |
| Is climate change mitigation compatible with environmental protection? Exploring voter attitudes as expressed through old and new politics in Norway |
1 |