All Stories

  1. Decarbonizing China’s Urban Agglomerations
  2. Stronger Contributions of Urbanization to Heat Wave Trends in Wet Climates
  3. Priority areas at the frontiers of ecology and energy
  4. Social science perspectives on drivers of and responses to global climate change
  5. Managing the distributional effects of energy taxes and subsidy removal in Latin America and the Caribbean
  6. Twelve Questions for the Participatory Modeling Community
  7. City-level climate change mitigation in China
  8. Re-Examining Embodied SO2 and CO2 Emissions in China
  9. Purpose, processes, partnerships, and products: four Ps to advance participatory socio-environmental modeling
  10. Chinese CO2 emission flows have reversed since the global financial crisis
  11. Poverty eradication in a carbon constrained world
  12. Measuring the environmental sustainability performance of global supply chains: A multi-regional input-output analysis for carbon, sulphur oxide and water footprints
  13. Ecological Network Analysis of Embodied Energy Exchanges Among the Seven Regions of China
  14. Linking Local Consumption to Global Impacts
  15. Household carbon footprints in the Baltic States: A global multi-regional input–output analysis from 1995 to 2011
  16. Global Implications of China's Future Food Consumption
  17. Comparing apples and oranges: Some confusion about using and interpreting physical trade matrices versus multi-regional input–output analysis
  18. Four system boundaries for carbon accounts
  19. A hydro-economic MRIO analysis of the Haihe River Basin's water footprint and water stress
  20. On the relationship between landscape ecological patterns and water quality across gradient zones of rapid urbanization in coastal China
  21. Developing a conceptual framework for the attitude–intention–behaviour links driving illegal resource extraction in Bardia National Park, Nepal
  22. Analysis of spatial patterns of urban growth across South Asia using DMSP-OLS nighttime lights data
  23. Challenges faced when energy meets water: CO2 and water implications of power generation in inner Mongolia of China
  24. Driving forces of CO2 emissions in the G20 countries: An index decomposition analysis from 1971 to 2010
  25. Physical and virtual water transfers for regional water stress alleviation in China
  26. China's unequal ecological exchange
  27. Consumption-based CO2 accounting of China's megacities: The case of Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai and Chongqing
  28. Building a 21st-century infrastructure for the social sciences
  29. The energy and water nexus in Chinese electricity production: A hybrid life cycle analysis
  30. Lifting China’s Water Spell
  31. Determinants of stagnating carbon intensity in China
  32. Landscape Preferences in a Desert City in the American Southwest
  33. Virtual Scarce Water in China
  34. Efficiency targets fall short of achieving a low-carbon future in China
  35. Migrating to tackle climate variability and change? Insights from coastal fishing communities in Bangladesh
  36. Drivers of greenhouse gas emissions in the Baltic States: A structural decomposition analysis
  37. Teleconnecting Consumption to Environmental Impacts at Multiple Spatial Scales
  38. Limits and barriers to adaptation to climate variability and change in Bangladeshi coastal fishing communities
  39. Economic vulnerability to Peak Oil
  40. Better cars or older cars?: Assessing CO2 emission reduction potential of passenger vehicle replacement programs
  41. Tele-connecting local consumption to global land use
  42. Participatory scenario development for environmental management: A methodological framework illustrated with experience from the UK uplands
  43. Perceptions of desert landscape: a case study in southern New Mexico
  44. Eliminating Indirect Energy Subsidies in Ukraine: Estimation of Environmental and Socioeconomic Effects Using Input–Output Modeling
  45. Underlying and proximate driving causes of land use change in district Swat, Pakistan
  46. Drivers of CO2 emissions in the former Soviet Union: A country level IPAT analysis from 1990 to 2010
  47. Carbon footprints of cities and other human settlements in the UK
  48. Energyscapes: Linking the energy system and ecosystem services in real landscapes
  49. Outsourcing CO 2 within China
  50. Vulnerability of fishery-based livelihoods to the impacts of climate variability and change: insights from coastal Bangladesh
  51. Modelling land management for ecosystem services
  52. Modelling land use change across elevation gradients in district Swat, Pakistan
  53. Synthesizing different perspectives on the value of urban ecosystem services
  54. Could Payments for Ecosystem Services Create an "Ecosystem Service Curse"?
  55. Anticipating and Managing Future Trade-offs and Complementarities between Ecosystem Services
  56. Ecosystem Services, Governance, and Stakeholder Participation: an Introduction
  57. From Polluter Pays to Provider Gets: Distribution of Rights and Costs under Payments for Ecosystem Services
  58. What does the future hold for semi-arid Mediterranean agro-ecosystems? – Exploring cellular automata and agent-based trajectories of future land-use change
  59. The role of expert opinion in environmental modelling
  60. Afforestation, agricultural abandonment and intensification: Competing trajectories in semi-arid Mediterranean agro-ecosystems
  61. Analyzing Drivers of Regional Carbon Dioxide Emissions for China
  62. Carrot and Stick—A Novel Policy Experiment of Transboundary Watershed Protection in China
  63. The gigatonne gap in China’s carbon dioxide inventories
  64. Energy-water nexus of wind power in China: The balancing act between CO2 emissions and water consumption
  65. Assessing regional virtual water flows and water footprints in the Yellow River Basin, China: A consumption based approach
  66. Evaluating farmers’ likely participation in a payment programme for water quality protection in the UK uplands
  67. Regional consequences of the way land users respond to future water availability in Murcia, Spain
  68. Wind power in China – Dream or reality?
  69. Exploring Panarchy in Alpine Grasslands: an Application of Adaptive Cycle Concepts to the Conservation of a Cultural Landscape
  70. Changing Lifestyles Towards a Low Carbon Economy: An IPAT Analysis for China
  71. Environmental Impact Assessment, ecosystems services and the case of energy crops in England
  72. COMPARISON OF BOTTOM-UP AND TOP-DOWN APPROACHES TO CALCULATING THE WATER FOOTPRINTS OF NATIONS
  73. Farmer typology, future scenarios and the implications for ecosystem service provision: a case study from south-eastern Spain
  74. Managing Peatland Ecosystem Services: Current UK Policy and Future Challenges in a Changing World
  75. Learning from Experiences in Adaptive Action Research: a Critical Comparison of two Case Studies Applying Participatory Scenario Development and Modelling Approaches
  76. A “Carbonizing Dragon”: China’s Fast Growing CO 2 Emissions Revisited
  77. Public preferences for production of local and global ecosystem services
  78. The net effect of green lifestyles
  79. KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT FOR LAND DEGRADATION MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT: AN ANALYSIS OF CONTEMPORARY THINKING
  80. Spatial and temporal dynamics of land use pattern in District Swat, Hindu Kush Himalayan region of Pakistan
  81. Role of Motor Vehicle Lifetime Extension in Climate Change Policy
  82. “Is the concept of a green economy a useful way of framing policy discussions and policymaking to promote sustainable development?”
  83. Drivers of illegal resource extraction: An analysis of Bardia National Park, Nepal
  84. Assessing Vulnerability to Climate Change in Dryland Livelihood Systems: Conceptual Challenges and Interdisciplinary Solutions
  85. Spatially Explicit Analysis of Water Footprints in the UK
  86. Management of commons with a proper way a critical review Hardin's essay on the tragedy of commons
  87. China can offer domestic emission cap-and-trade in post 2012
  88. Distributional Effects of Climate Change Taxation: The Case of the UK
  89. Property rights in UK uplands and the implications for policy and management
  90. Assessing regional and global water footprints for the UK
  91. The Impact of Social Factors and Consumer Behavior on Carbon Dioxide Emissions in the United Kingdom
  92. Sustainable Consumption and Production
  93. The Impacts of Household Consumption and Options for Change
  94. The future of the uplands
  95. Using scenarios to explore UK upland futures
  96. Lifestyles, technology and CO2 emissions in China: A regional comparative analysis
  97. Erratum to “Assessing the suitability of Input-Output analysis for enhancing our understanding of potential effects of Peak-Oil” [Energy (2008) 34: 284–290]
  98. Environmental implications of urbanization and lifestyle change in China: Ecological and Water Footprints
  99. INPUT–OUTPUT ANALYSIS AND CARBON FOOTPRINTING: AN OVERVIEW OF APPLICATIONS
  100. Stakeholder Analysis and Social Network Analysis in Natural Resource Management
  101. Who's in and why? A typology of stakeholder analysis methods for natural resource management
  102. Modelling the coupled dynamics of moorland management and upland vegetation
  103. Assessing the suitability of input–output analysis for enhancing our understanding of potential economic effects of Peak Oil
  104. Journey to world top emitter: An analysis of the driving forces of China's recent CO2emissions surge
  105. Adaptive Land-Use Management in Dynamic Ecological System
  106. Lessons Learned from a Computer-Assisted Participatory Planning and Management Process in the Peak District National Park, England
  107. An empirical analysis of the environmental Kuznets curve for water pollution in India
  108. Physical Input-Output Analysis and Disposals to Nature
  109. Conceptual Foundations and Applications of Physical Input-Output Tables
  110. ‘Who’s in the Network?’ When Stakeholders Influence Data Analysis
  111. The drivers of Chinese CO2 emissions from 1980 to 2030
  112. The contribution of Chinese exports to climate change
  113. A new and integrated hydro-economic accounting and analytical framework for water resources: A case study for North China
  114. Genetic Algorithms for dynamic land-use optimization
  115. Future generations: Economic, legal and institutional aspects
  116. The environmental effect of car-free housing: A case in Vienna
  117. Material implication of Chile's economic growth: Combining material flow accounting (MFA) and structural decomposition analysis (SDA)
  118. Economic and Societal Changes in China and their Effects onWater Use A Scenario Analysis
  119. Is small beautiful? A multicriteria assessment of small-scale energy technology applications in local governments
  120. Changing lifestyles and consumption patterns in developing countries: A scenario analysis for China and India
  121. If you have a hammer everything looks like a nail: traditional versus participatory model building
  122. China's Growing CO 2 EmissionsA Race between Increasing Consumption and Efficiency Gains
  123. Adaptive farming strategies for dynamic economic environment
  124. What to expect from a greater geographic dispersion of wind farms?—A risk portfolio approach
  125. Environmental change in moorland landscapes
  126. Assessment of regional trade and virtual water flows in China
  127. Using stakeholder and social network analysis to support participatory processes
  128. The physical economy of the European Union: Cross-country comparison and determinants of material consumption
  129. Learning from Doing Participatory Rural Research: Lessons from the Peak District National Park
  130. Changing concepts of ‘land’ in economic theory: From single to multi-disciplinary approaches
  131. Alternative Approaches of Physical Input–Output Analysis to Estimate Primary Material Inputs of Production and Consumption Activities
  132. Beyond the simple material balance: a reply to Sangwon Suh's note on physical input–output analysis
  133. Linking social expenditures to household lifestyles
  134. Applying physical input–output analysis to estimate land appropriation (ecological footprints) of international trade activities
  135. A scenario analysis of China's land use and land cover change: incorporating biophysical information into input–output modeling
  136. Land, labour and the anthropology of work: towards sustainable livelihoods
  137. Social network analysis for natural resource governance
  138. Social network analysis for stakeholder selection and the links to social learning and adaptive co-management