All Stories

  1. A Comparison of drought instruments and livelihood capitals
  2. The Puzzle of the Global Commons or The Tragedy of Inequality: Revisiting Hardin
  3. Editorial - Inclusive development and urban water services
  4. Inclusive Development and Climate Change: The Geopolitics of Fossil Fuel Risks in Developing Countries
  5. Managing Global Disruptions by Working Towards Global Constitutionalism
  6. INEA editorial: Achieving 1.5 °C and climate justice
  7. Megacities and rivers: Scalar mismatches between urban water management and river basin management
  8. Editorial
  9. Reprint of “Inclusive development and coastal adaptiveness”
  10. Social capital, interactive governance and coastal protection: The effectiveness of mangrove ecosystem-based strategies in promoting inclusive development in Demak, Indonesia
  11. Climate change: the risks of stranded fossil fuel assets and resources to the developing world
  12. Achieving the 1.5 °C objective: just implementation through a right to (sustainable) development approach
  13. Global climate change and global groundwater law: their independent and pluralistic evolution and potential challenges
  14. Sustainable Development Principles in the Decisions of International Courts and Tribunals
  15. Editorial overview: Sustainability science
  16. Inclusive development and coastal adaptiveness
  17. Inclusive development from a gender perspective in small scale fisheries
  18. Inclusive development: a multi-disciplinary approach
  19. Pro-poor water and sanitation: operationalising inclusive discourses to benefit the poor
  20. Towards a trans-disciplinary conceptualization of inclusive development
  21. The adaptive capacity of institutions in Canada, Argentina, and Chile to droughts and floods
  22. Why equity is fundamental in climate change policy research
  23. The Watercourses Convention, Hydro-hegemony and Transboundary Water Issues
  24. Damming the Mekong tributaries: water security and the MRC 1995 Agreement
  25. The Paris Climate Change Agreement: China and India
  26. Sustainable development goals and inclusive development
  27. Kinds of freshwater and their relation to ecosystem services and human well-being
  28. Inclusive development, oil extraction and climate change: a multilevel analysis of Kenya
  29. The science and politics of co-benefits in climate policy
  30. Climate change governance: history, future, and triple-loop learning?
  31. New approaches to cleaner production: applying the SASI method to micro-tanneries in Colombia
  32. Global governance principles for the sustainable development of groundwater resources
  33. The politics of co-benefits in Indias energy sector
  34. Adaptive Governance, Uncertainty, and Risk: Policy Framing and Responses to Climate Change, Drought, and Flood
  35. A Tribute to Pier Vellinga
  36. Towards an Elaborated Theory of Inclusive Development
  37. Fresh water goes global
  38. The split ladder of participation: A diagnostic, strategic, and evaluation tool to assess when participation is necessary
  39. The impact of economic recession on climate change: eight trends
  40. The adaptive capacity of institutions in the spatial planning, water, agriculture and nature sectors in the Netherlands
  41. An Inclusive Development Perspective on the Geographies of Urban Governance
  42. Geographies of Urban Governance
  43. Setting the Scene: The Geographies of Urban Governance
  44. Theorizing Governance
  45. Recent revisions of phosphate rock reserves and resources: a critique
  46. The Evolution of the Right to Water and Sanitation: Differentiating the Implications
  47. Editorial overview: Legal pluralism, governance and aquatic resources
  48. Indigenous people's right to water under international law: a legal pluralism perspective
  49. Legal pluralism in aquatic regimes: a challenge for governance
  50. Legal pluralism in the area of human rights: water and sanitation
  51. Protected by pluralism? Grappling with multiple legal frameworks in groundwater governance
  52. Towards an elaborated theory of legal pluralism and aquatic resources
  53. China’s Evolving Development Dilemma in the Context of the North-South Climate Governance Debate
  54. Essential Concepts of Global Environmental Governance
  55. Normative Issues in Global Environmental Governance: Connecting Climate Change, Water and Forests
  56. Implementing REDD+ (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation): evidence on governance, evaluation and impacts from the REDD-ALERT project
  57. The extraterritorial dimensions of biofuel policies and the politics of scale: live and let die?
  58. ‘Glocal’ Politics of Scale on Environmental Issues: Climate Change, Water and Forests
  59. Editorial
  60. The History of Global Climate Governance
  61. Private equity, public affair: Hydropower financing in the Mekong Basin
  62. The Human Right to Water and Sanitation: Reflections on Making the System Effective
  63. ‘Glocal’ water governance: a multi-level challenge in the anthropocene
  64. Climate risks and adaptation strategies in the Lower Mekong River basin
  65. The Policy Context of Biofuels: A Case of Non-Governance at the Global Level?
  66. Global Water Governance
  67. Clean development mechanism: a way to sustainable waste management in developing countries?
  68. Climate-proof planning for flood-prone areas: assessing the adaptive capacity of planning institutions in the Netherlands
  69. Editorial on Global Water Governance
  70. Global Water Governance in the Context of Global and Multilevel Governance: Its Need, Form, and Challenges
  71. Comparing Global Coordination Mechanisms on Energy, Environment, and Water
  72. Policymakers’ Reflections on Water Governance Issues
  73. Thinking about the Future of Global Water Governance
  74. Water management in Ghana: between the idea and the implementation
  75. Glocal forest and REDD+ governance: win–win or lose–lose?
  76. Climate Change, Forests and REDD
  77. China's drought strategies in rural areas along the Lancang River
  78. Negotiating challenges and climate change
  79. Does individual responsibility increase the adaptive capacity of society? The case of local water management in the Netherlands
  80. Global Green Governance: Embedding the Green Economy in a Global Green and Equitable Rule of Law Polity
  81. Navigating the Anthropocene: Improving Earth System Governance
  82. Transforming governance and institutions for global sustainability: key insights from the Earth System Governance Project
  83. IWRM and developing countries: Implementation challenges in Ghana
  84. Reconciling IWRM and water delivery in Ghana – The potential and the challenges
  85. The global governance of climate change, forests, water, and food: normative challenges
  86. RECENT CHANGES IN THE NILE REGION MAY CREATE AN OPPORTUNITY FOR A MORE EQUITABLE SHARING OF THE NILE RIVER WATERS
  87. A book conversation with the editors and a reviewer. Law and water governance: past, present, and future
  88. Energy security in a developing world
  89. Societal Learning Needed to Face the Water Challenge
  90. The future of the CDM: same same, but differentiated?
  91. The Evolution of Ghana's Water Law and Policy
  92. The Human Right to Water: Moving Towards Consensus in a Fragmented World
  93. Earth system governance: a research framework
  94. Access and allocation in earth system governance: water and climate change compared
  95. Adaptation strategies of the poorest farmers in drought-prone Gujarat
  96. The Adaptive Capacity Wheel: a method to assess the inherent characteristics of institutions to enable the adaptive capacity of society
  97. A history of international climate change policy
  98. Navigating the anthropocene: the Earth System Governance Project strategy paper
  99. Climate change and development cooperation: trends and questions
  100. Sharing the burden of financing adaptation to climate change
  101. Privatizing Environmental Resources: The Need for Supervision of Clean Development Mechanism Contracts?
  102. Conference Covered Climate from All Angles
  103. The Politics of Water Science: On Unresolved Water Problems and Biased Research Agendas
  104. Global energy efficiency governance in the context of climate politics
  105. Mainstreaming Climate Change in Development Cooperation
  106. India: Evolution of Water Law and Policy
  107. The Challenges for the Twenty-First Century: A Critical Approach
  108. The Evolution of Global Water Law
  109. The Evolution of the Law and Politics of Water
  110. Scale issues in the governance of water storage projects
  111. Flexibility mechanisms and sustainable development: lessons from five AIJ projects
  112. Interbasin water transfers and integrated water resources management: Where engineering, science and politics interlock
  113. Post-2012 climate policy dilemmas: a review of proposals
  114. Exogenous Promotion of Sustainable Electricity Policies in India: Opportunities and Challenges
  115. Legal Steps Outside the Climate Convention: Litigation as a Tool to Address Climate Change
  116. Contemporary Environmental Politics
  117. Helping operationalise Article 2: A transdisciplinary methodological tool for evaluating when climate change is dangerous
  118. Advancing the Climate Agenda: Exploiting Material and Institutional Linkages to Develop a Menu of Policy Options
  119. Moving the Climate Change Regime Further Through a Hydrogen Protocol
  120. Global sustainable food governance and hunger
  121. Environmental Values in a Globalising World
  122. The power sector in China and India: greenhouse gas emissions reduction potential and scenarios for 1990–2020
  123. The role of scientific uncertainty in compliance with the Kyoto Protocol to the Climate Change Convention
  124. India and Climate Change Policy: Between Diplomatic Defensiveness and Industrial Transformation
  125. Problem-Solving through International Environmental Agreements: The Issue of Regime Effectiveness
  126. Leadership in the climate change regime: the European Union in the looking glass
  127. The global environment facility in its North‐South context
  128. International policies to address the greenhouse effect: Encouraging developing country participation in global greenhouse control strategies
  129. Global governance: development cooperation
  130. Development and development cooperation theory
  131. Global governance: climate cooperation
  132. Global governance of ecosystem services and related policy instruments
  133. Global water governance and river basin organisations
  134. Changing North–South Challenges in Global Environmental Politics
  135. The Dutch focus: a Delta Act for climate adaptation
  136. Climate change, development and development cooperation
  137. Incorporating climate change into EU Member States' development cooperation
  138. Mainstreaming climate change: a theoretical exploration
  139. Prospects for mainstreaming climate change in development cooperation
  140. The need for climate assistance
  141. The supply of aid and the need–supply nexus
  142. Good Governance and Climate Change: Recommendations from a North–South Perspective
  143. Regulatory competition and developing countries and the challenge for compliance push and pull measures