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1. monograph
Global trends 2030 : citizens in an interconnected and polycentric world / [ed. by Álvaro de Vasconcelos] by Language: English
Publication details: Paris : EUISS, 2012
Availability: Items available for loan: SIPRI Library and Documentation (1)Call number: 327 Global.
2. monograph
The politics of globality since 1945 : assembling the planet / edited by Rens van Munster, Casper Sylvest by Series: The new international relations
Edition: First published 2016
Language: English
Publication details: London : Routledge, 2016
Availability: Items available for loan: SIPRI Library and Documentation (1)Call number: 327.001 Politics.
3. journal article
Le changement climatique, le protocole de Kyoto et les relations translatlantiques par Imène Ajala et Urs Luterbacher by Language: French In: Politique étrangère 2009:1, pp. 103-116
Availability: Items available for loan: SIPRI Library and Documentation (1)Call number: Periodicals.
4. monograph
Climate terror : a critical geopolitics of climate change / Sanjay Chaturvedi and Timothy Doyle by Series: New security challenges seriesLanguage: English
Publication details: New York, NY : Palsgrave Macmillan, 2016
Availability: Items available for loan: SIPRI Library and Documentation (1)Call number: 551.5 Chaturvedi.
5. monograph
6. monograph
Savage ecology : war and geopolitics at the end of the world / Jairus Victor Grove by Language: English
Publication details: Durham : Duke University Press, 2019
Availability: Items available for loan: SIPRI Library and Documentation (1)Call number: 502.5 Grove.
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8. report
Global adaptation governance : evidence from 30 international organizations, 1990-2017 / Ece Kural by Series: Stockholm Studies in International Relations ; 2021:1Language: English
Publication details: Stockholm : Stockholms universitet, 2021
Dissertation note: Diss. (summary) Stockholm : Stockholms universitet, 2021. This dissertation asks to what extent, how and why non-climate IOs engage with climate change adaptation. To answer this research question, the dissertation develops an overarching theoretical framework. The main argument is that IOs’ behavior and willingness to engage with climate adaptation is a function of internal (IO design and bureaucratic politics) and external factors (IO connectivity, resource dependency, fragmentation, problem complexity). Throughout five independent research articles in this dissertation, I utilize this framework to develop new hypotheses in the context of adaptation. Drawing on case studies and quantitative overtime data of 30 IOs, this thesis demonstrates that all non-climate IOs in the sample display engagement with climate adaptation in various forms ranging from publishing global guidelines to implementing local- level projects.
Availability: Items available for loan: SIPRI Library and Documentation (1)Call number: 327ser Stockholms.
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