Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-dfsvx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T20:20:45.342Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Part IV - Sustainability and Climate Change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2020

Katharine Legun
Affiliation:
Wageningen University and Research, The Netherlands
Julie C. Keller
Affiliation:
University of Rhode Island
Michael Carolan
Affiliation:
Colorado State University
Michael M. Bell
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References

Arendt, H. (1958) The Human Condition. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Ariès, P. (2005) Décroissance ou Barbarie. Lyon: Golias.Google Scholar
Barry, J. (2005) Ecological modernisation. In Dryzek, J & Schlosberg, D (eds.), Debating the Earth, pp. 303–21. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Binswanger, M. (2001) Technological progress and sustainable development: what about the Rebound Effect? Ecological Economics, 36: 119–32.Google Scholar
Blühdorn, I. (2007) Sustaining the unsustainable: symbolic politics and the politics of simulation. Environmental Politics, 16(2): 251–75.Google Scholar
Blühdorn, I., and Welsh, I. (2007) Eco-politics beyond the paradigm of sustainability: a conceptual framework and research agenda. Environmental Politics, 16(2): 185205.Google Scholar
Caillé, A. (2005) Dé-penser l’Economique: Contre la Fatalité. Paris: La Découverte.Google Scholar
Callon, M. (ed.) (1998) The Laws of the Markets. London: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Chertkovskaya, E., Paulsson, A., Kallis, G., Barca, S. and D’Alisa, G. (2017) The vocabulary of degrowth: a roundtable debate. Ephemera, 17(1): 189208Google Scholar
Cosme, I., Santos, R., and O’Neill, D. (2017) Assessing the degrowth discourse: a review and analysis of academic degrowth policy proposals. Journal of Cleaner Production, 149: 321–34.Google Scholar
D’Alisa, G., Demaria, F., and Kallis, G. (eds.) (2015) Degrowth: A Vocabulary for a New Era. Abingdon: Routledge.Google Scholar
Daly, H. (1996) Beyond Growth: The Economics of Sustainable Development. Boston, MA: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Dengler, C., and Strunk, B. (2018) The monetized economy versus care and the environment: degrowth perspectives on reconciling an antagonism. Feminist Economics, 24(3): 160–83.Google Scholar
Dobson, A. (2003) Citizenship and the Environment. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doherty, B., and de Geus, M. (eds.) (1996) Democracy and Green Political Thought: Sustainability, Rights and Citizenship. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Fournier, V. (2008) Escaping from the economy: the politics of degrowth. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 28 (11/12):528–45.Google Scholar
Georgescu-Roegen, N. (1971) The Entropy Law and the Economic Process. Harvard University Press: Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Gerber, J-D. and Gerber, J-F. (2017) Decommodification as foundation for ecological economics. Ecological Economics, 131: 551–6.Google Scholar
Gibson-Graham, J. K. (1996) The End of Capitalism (As We Knew It): A Feminist Critique of Political Economy. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Gibson-Graham, J. K. (2006) A Postcapitalist Politics. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Goodman, P. (2018) Free cash to fight income inequality? California city is first in US to try. The New York Times, May 30. Available at www.nytimes.com/2018/05/30/business/stockton-basic-income.htmlGoogle Scholar
Gorz, A. (1975) Ecologie et Politique. Paris: Galilée.Google Scholar
Hamilton, C. (2003) Growth Fetish. Sydney: Allen and Unwin.Google Scholar
Harvie, D., Slater, G., Philip, B. and Wheatley, D. (2009) Economic well-being and British regions: the problem with GDP per capita. Review of Social Economy, 67(4): 483505.Google Scholar
Herring, H. (2002) Is energy efficiency environmentally friendly? Energy & Environment, 11: 313–25.Google Scholar
Illich, I. (1973) Tools for Conviviality. London: Calder and Boyars.Google Scholar
Jackson, T. (2009) Prosperity without Growth: Economics for a Finite Planet. London: Earthscan.Google Scholar
James, O. (2007) Affluenza: How to Be Successful and Stay Sane. London: Vermillon.Google Scholar
Joutsenvirta, M. (2016) A practice approach to the institutionalization of economic degrowth. Ecological Economics, 128: 2332.Google Scholar
Kallis, G. (2011) In defence of degrowth. Ecological Economics, 70: 873–80.Google Scholar
Kallis, G., and March, H. (2015) Imaginaries of hope: the utopianism of degrowth. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 105 (2): 360–8Google Scholar
Kallis, G., Kerschner, C., and Martinez-Alier, J. (2012) The economics of degrowth. Ecological Economics, 84: 172–80.Google Scholar
Lans, C. (2016) Worldwide Opportunities on Organic Farms (WWOOF) as part of the existing care economy in Canada. Geoforum, 75: 1619.Google Scholar
Latouche, S. (2004) Degrowth Economics: why less should be much more, Le Monde Diplomatique, November (available at http://mondediplo.com/2004/11/14latouche)Google Scholar
Latouche, S. (2005a) Décoloniser l’imaginaire. Lyon: ParangonGoogle Scholar
Latouche, S. (2005b) L’invention de l’Economie. Paris: Albin Michel.Google Scholar
Latouche, S. (2006) The globe downshifted: how do we learn to want less? Le Monde Diplomatique, English edition, January (available at http://mondediplo.com/2006/01/13degrowth).Google Scholar
Latouche, S. (2014) Essays on Frugal Abundance. Paris: Simplicity Institute. Available at http://simplicityinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/FrugalAbundance1SimplicityInstitute.pdfGoogle Scholar
Latta, P. (2007) Locating democratic politics in ecological citizenship, Environmental Politics, 16(3): 377–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martinez-Alier, J., Pascual, U., Vivien, F-D. and Zaccai, E. (2010) Sustainable de-growth: mapping the context, criticisms and future prospects of an emergent paradigm. Ecological Economics, 69: 1741–7.Google Scholar
Meadows, D., Meadows, D. and Randes, J. (1972) Limits to Growth. New York: Universe Books.Google Scholar
Milne, M., Kearins, K. and Walton, S. (2006) Creating adventures in wonderland: the journey metaphor and environmental sustainability. Organization, 13 (6): 801–39.Google Scholar
Næss, A. (1989) Ecology, Community and Lifestyle: Outline of an Ecosophy. Translated by D. Rothenberg. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
NEF (2010) 21 Hours: Why a Shorter Working Week Can Help Us All to Flourish in the 21th Century. London: New Economic Foundation.Google Scholar
Nierling, L. (2012) “This is a bit of the good life”: recognition of unpaid work from the perspective of degrowth. Ecological Economics, 84: 240–6.Google Scholar
Norgard, J. (2013) Happy degrowth through more amateur economy. Journal of Cleaner Production, 38: 6170.Google Scholar
O’Neill, D. (2015) Gross National product. In D’Alisa, G., Demaria, F, and Kallis, G. (eds.) Degrowth: A Vocabulary for a New Era: 103–8. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Odum, H.T., Odum, E.C. (2006) The prosperous way down. Energy, 31: 2132.Google Scholar
Picketty, T. (2014) Capital in the 21st Century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Polanyi, K. (1944). The Great Transformation. New York: Rinehart.Google Scholar
Princen, T. (2003) Principles for sustainability: from cooperation and efficiency to sufficiency. Global Environmental Politics, 3(1): 3350.Google Scholar
Romano, O. (2015) Dépense. In D’Alisa, G., Demaria, F. and Kallis, G,. (eds). Degrowth: A Vocabulary for a New Era: pp. 8689. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Schneider, F. (2003) L’effet Rebond. l’Ecologiste, 4(3): 45.Google Scholar
Schneider, F., Kallis, G., Martinez-Alier, J. (2010) Crisis or opportunity? Economic degrowth for social equity and ecological sustainability. Journal of Cleaner Production, 18: 511–18.Google Scholar
Schor, J. (2015) Work sharing. In D’Alisa, G., Demaria, F. and Kallis, G,. (eds). Degrowth: A Vocabulary for a New Era: pp. 195–8. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Schumacher, E.F. (1973) Small Is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered. London: Blong and Briggs.Google Scholar
Scott-Cato, M. (2006) Market, Schmarket: Building the Post-Capitalist Economy. Cheltenham: New Clarion Press.Google Scholar
Sessions, G. (ed) (1995) Deep Ecology for the Twenty-first Century. Boston: Shambhala.Google Scholar
Skidelsky, R. and Skidelsky, E. (2012) How Much Is Enough? New York: Other Press.Google Scholar
Stebbins, R. (2017) Between Work and Leisure: The Common Grounds of Two Separate Worlds. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Steffen, W., Richardson, K., Rockstrom, J. et al. (2015) Planetary boundaries: guiding human development on a changing planet. Science, 347 (6223): 115.Google Scholar
Tsing, A.L. (2015) The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
WCED (1987) Our Common Future. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Weiss, M. and Cattaneo, C. (2017) Degrowth: taking stock and reviewing an emerging academic paradigm. Ecological Economics, 137: 220–30.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, R. and Pickett, K. (2010) The Spirit Level. London: Bloomsbury Press.Google Scholar
Wright, E. (2010) Envisioning Real Utopias. London: Verso.Google Scholar

References

Alkon, A. H. (2012). Black, White, and Green: Farmers’ Markets, Race, and the Green Economy. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press.Google Scholar
Agyeman, J., and Evans, B. (2004). “Just sustainability”: The emerging discourse of environmental justice in Britain? The Geographical Journal, 170(2), 155164.Google Scholar
Aiken, G. T., Middlemiss, L., Sallu, S. and Hauxwell-Baldwin, R. (2017) Researching climate change and community in neoliberal contexts: An emerging critical approach. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 8(4), e463.Google Scholar
Anantharaman, M. (2017). Elite and ethical: The defensive distinctions of middle-class bicycling in Bangalore, India. Journal of Consumer Culture, 17(3), 864886.Google Scholar
Barnard, A. V. (2016). Freegans: Diving into The Wealth of Food Waste in America. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Baudrillard, J. (2016). The Consumer Society: Myths and Structures. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Bennett, E. A., Cordner, A., Klein, P. T., Savell, S., and Baiocchi, G. (2013). Disavowing politics: Civic engagement in an era of political skepticism. American Journal of Sociology, 119(2), 518548.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. (1984). Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste. Oxon, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
Cairns, K., Johnston, J., and MacKendrick, N. (2013). Feeding the “organic child”: Mothering through ethical consumption. Journal of Consumer Culture, 13(2), 97118.Google Scholar
Carfagna, L. B., Dubois, E. A., Fitzmaurice, C. et al. (2014). An emerging eco-habitus: the reconfiguration of high cultural capital practices among ethical consumers. Journal of Consumer Culture, 14(2), 158178.Google Scholar
Carolan, M. S. (2004). Ecological modernization theory: What about consumption? Society and Natural Resources, 17(3), 247260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carolan, M. (2015). Affective sustainable landscapes and care ecologies: Getting a real feel for alternative food communities. Sustainability Science, 10(2), 317329.Google Scholar
Clark, C. F., Kotchen, M. J., and Moore, M. R. (2003). Internal and external influences on pro-environmental behavior: Participation in a green electricity program. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 23(3), 237246.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, M. J., Brown, H. S., and Vergragt, P. (eds.). (2013). Innovations in Sustainable Consumption: New Economics, Socio-Technical Transitions and Social Practices. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing.Google Scholar
Csutora, M. (2012). One more awareness gap? The behaviour–impact gap problem. Journal of Consumer Policy, 35(1), 145163.Google Scholar
Curtis, R. B. (2016). Ethical markets in the artisan economy: Portland DIY. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 40(2), 235241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daly, H. E. (1990). Toward some operational principles of sustainable development. Ecological Economics, 2(1), 16.Google Scholar
Earth Overshoot Day. (2018) Retrieved from www.overshootday.org/. Accessed on July 9, 2018.Google Scholar
Elliott, R. (2013). The taste for green: The possibilities and dynamics of status differentiation through “green” consumption. Poetics, 41(3), 294322.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1988). Technologies of The Self: A Seminar with Michel Foucault. Boston, MA: University of Massachusetts Press.Google Scholar
Freudenburg, W. R. (2006). Environmental degradation, disproportionality, and the double diversion: Reaching out, reaching ahead, and reaching beyond. Rural Sociology, 71(1), 332.Google Scholar
Gabriel, Y., and Lang, T. (2015). The Unmanageable Consumer (20th Anniversary edition). London: Sage.Google Scholar
Geiger, S. M., Fischer, D., and Schrader, U. (2017). Measuring what matters in sustainable consumption: An integrative framework for the selection of relevant behaviors. Sustainable Development, 26(1), 1833.Google Scholar
Giddens, A. (1984). The Constitution of Society: Outline of the Theory of Structuration. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Griggs, D., Stafford-Smith, M, Gaffney, O, et al. (2013). Policy: Sustainable development goals for people and planet. Nature, 495(7441), 305.Google Scholar
Gould, K. A., Pellow, D. N., and Schnaiberg, A. (2004). Interrogating the treadmill of production: Everything you wanted to know about the treadmill but were afraid to ask. Organization and Environment, 17(3), 296316.Google Scholar
Halkier, B. (2009). A practice theoretical perspective on everyday dealings with environmental challenges of food consumption. Anthropology of Food, (S5) http://aof.revues.org/index6405.html, accessed July 9, 2018.Google Scholar
Hawken, P., Lovins, A. B., and Lovins, L. H. (2013). Natural Capitalism: The Next Industrial Revolution. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Hertwich, E. G. (2005). Life cycle approaches to sustainable consumption: A critical review. Environmental Science and Technology, 39(13), 46734684.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Huddart Kennedy, E., Parkins, J. R., & Johnston, J. (2016). Food activists, consumer strategies, and the democratic imagination: Insights from eat-local movements. Journal of Consumer Culture, 18(1), 149168.Google Scholar
Jackson, T. (2005). Motivating sustainable consumption: A review of evidence on consumer behaviour and behavioural change. A report to the Sustainable Development Research Network. Centre for Environmental Strategies, University of Surrey.Google Scholar
Johnston, J. (2008). The citizen-consumer hybrid: Ideological tensions and the case of Whole Foods Market. Theory and Society, 37(3), 229270.Google Scholar
Johnston, J., and Cairns, K. (2013). Searching for the “alternative,” caring, reflexive consumer. International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food, 20(3), 403408.Google Scholar
Kennedy, E. H. (2011). Rethinking ecological citizenship: The role of neighbourhood networks in cultural change. Environmental Politics, 20(6), 843860.Google Scholar
Kennedy, E. H., Krahn, H., and Krogman, N. T. (2014). Egregious emitters: Disproportionality in household carbon footprints. Environment and Behavior, 46(5), 535555.Google Scholar
Kennedy, E. H., Krahn, H., and Krogman, N. T. (2015). Are we counting what counts? A closer look at environmental concern, pro-environmental behaviour, and carbon footprint. Local Environment, 20(2), 220236.Google Scholar
Kennedy, E. H., Cohen, M. J., & Krogman, N. (eds.). (2016a). Putting Sustainability into Practice: Applications and Advances in Research on Sustainable Consumption. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing.Google Scholar
Kennedy, E. H., Cohen, M. J., & Krogman, N. T. (2016b). Social practice theories and research on sustainable consumption. In Putting Sustainability into Practice: Applications and Advances in Research on Sustainable Consumption (322). Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing.Google Scholar
Kennedy, E. H., Johnston, J., and Parkins, J. R.. (2017). Small‐p politics: How pleasurable, convivial and pragmatic political ideals influence engagement in eat‐local initiatives. The British Journal of Sociology. DOI:0.1111/1468-4446.12298. [Epub ahead of print].Google Scholar
Kennedy, E. H. and Kmec, J. A.. 2018. (2018). Reinterpreting the gender gap in household pro-environmental behaviour. Environmental Sociology, 4(3), 299310.Google Scholar
Kollmuss, A., and Agyeman, J. (2002). Mind the gap: Why do people act environmentally and what are the barriers to pro-environmental behavior? Environmental Education Research, 8(3), 239260.Google Scholar
Lamont, M., Silva, G. M., Welburn, J. et al. (2016b). Getting Respect: Responding to Stigma and Discrimination in The United States, Brazil, and Israel. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Lamont, M. (1992). Money, Morals, And Manners: The Culture of The French and the American Upper-Middle Class. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Liu, Y., Qu, Y, Lei, Z, and Jia, H. (2017). Understanding the evolution of sustainable consumption research. Sustainable Development, 25(5), 414430.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lorenzen, J. A. (2012). Going green: The process of lifestyle change. Sociological Forum 27(1), 94116.Google Scholar
Maniates, M. F. (2001). Individualization: Plant a tree, buy a bike, save the world? Global Environmental Politics, 1(3), 3152.Google Scholar
Middlemiss, L. (2018). Sustainable Consumption: Key Issues. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Middlemiss, L. (2014). Individualised or participatory? Exploring late-modern identity and sustainable development. Environmental politics, 23(6), 929946.Google Scholar
Mol, A. P., and Spaargaren, G. (2004). Ecological modernization and consumption: A reply. Society and Natural Resources, 17(3), 261265.Google Scholar
Norgaard, K. M., Reed, R., and Van Horn, C. (2011). A continuing legacy: Institutional racism, hunger, and nutritional justice on the Klamath. In Cultivating Food Justice: Race, Class, and Sustainability, eds. Alkon, A. H. and Agyeman, J. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 2345.Google Scholar
Perrin, A. J. (2009). Citizen Speak: The Democratic Imagination in American Life. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Reisch, L. A., Cohen, M. J., Thøgersen, J. B., and Tukker, A. (2016). Frontiers in sustainable consumption research. GAIA-Ecological Perspectives for Science and Society, 25(4), 234240.Google Scholar
Ritzer, G., & Jurgenson, N. (2010). Production, consumption, prosumption: The nature of capitalism in the age of the digital “prosumer.” Journal of Consumer Culture, 10(1), 1336.Google Scholar
Rockström, J., Steffen, W, Noone, K, Persson, Å, Chapin, F. S. et al. (2009). A safe operating space for humanity. Nature 461(7263): 472475. doi:10.1038/461472a.Google Scholar
Rose, N. (2000). Community, citizenship, and the third way. American Behavioral Scientist, 43(9), 13951411.Google Scholar
Sanne, C. (2002). Willing consumers – or locked-in? Policies for a sustainable consumption. Ecological Economics, 42(1), 273287.Google Scholar
Schelly, C. (2017). Dwelling in Resistance: Living with Alternative Technologies in America. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Schor, J. (2008). The Overworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Shove, E. (2003). Comfort, Cleanliness and Convenience, London, Berg.Google Scholar
Shove, E. (2010). Beyond the ABC: Climate change policy and theories of social change. Environment and Planning A, 42(6), 12731285.Google Scholar
Shove, E., and Warde, A. (2002). Inconspicuous consumption: The sociology of consumption, lifestyles and the environment. In Dunlap, R. E., Buttel, F. H., Dickens, P, and Gijswijt, A (eds.) Sociological Theory and The Environment: Classical Foundations, Contemporary Insights (230251). Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc.Google Scholar
Soneryd, L., and Uggla, Y. (2015). Green governmentality and responsibilization: New forms of governance and responses to “consumer responsibility.” Environmental Politics, 24(6), 913931.Google Scholar
Soper, K. (2004). Rethinking the “good life”: The consumer as citizen. Capitalism Nature Socialism, 15(3), 111116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Southerton, D., Warde, A., and Hand, M. (2004). The limited autonomy of the consumer: Implications for sustainable consumption. Sustainable Consumption: The Implications of Changing Infrastructures of Provision, 3248. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing.Google Scholar
Steffan, W., Richardson, K., Röckström, J. et al. Planetary boundaries: Guiding development on a changing planet. Science, 347 (6223) DOI:10.1126/science.1259855.Google Scholar
Stern, P.C., Dietz, T., Abel, T.D., Guagnano, G.A. and Kalof, L. (1999). A value-belief-norm theory of support for social movements: The case of environmentalism. Human Ecology Review, 6(2), 8197.Google Scholar
Stolle, D., and Micheletti, M. (2013). Political Consumerism: Global Responsibility in Action. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Swidler, A. (1986). Culture in action: Symbols and strategies. American Sociological Review, 51, 273286.Google Scholar
Szasz, A. (2007). Shopping Our Way to Safety: How We Changed from Protecting the Environment to Protecting Ourselves. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Vergragt, P., Akenji, L., and Dewick, P. (2014). Sustainable production, consumption, and livelihoods: global and regional research perspectives. Journal of Cleaner Production, 63, 112.Google Scholar
Warde, A. (2017). Sustainable Consumption: Practices, Habits and Politics. In Consumption (181204). London: Palgrave Macmillan UK.Google Scholar
Warde, A. (2005). Consumption and theories of practice. Journal of Consumer Culture, 5(2), 131153.Google Scholar
Wiidegren, Ö. (1998). The new environmental paradigm and personal norms. Environment and Behavior, 30(1), 75100.Google Scholar

References

Archer, M. S. (1996). Culture and Agency: The place of culture in social theory. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.Google Scholar
Bardazzi, R., & Pazienza, M. G. (2017). Switch off the light, please! Energy use, aging population and consumption habits. Energy Economics, 65, 161–71.Google Scholar
Barton, B., Blackwell, S., Carrington, G. et al. (2013). Energy cultures: Implications for policymakers. Centre for Sustainability. Retrieved from https://ourarchive.otago.ac.nz/handle/10523/3747Google Scholar
Bell, M., Carrington, G, Lawson, R, Stephenson, J (2014). Socio-technical barriers to the use of low-emission timber drying technology in New Zealand. Energy Policy, 67, 747–55.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. (1977). Outline of a Theory of Practice. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.Google Scholar
Dew, N., Aten, K., & Ferrer, G. (2017). How many admirals does it take to change a light bulb? Organizational innovation, energy efficiency, and the United States Navy’s battle over LED lighting. Energy Research & Social Science, 27, 5767.Google Scholar
Ford, R., Karlin, B., Frantz, C. (2016). Evaluating Energy Cultures: Identifying and validating measures for behaviour-based energy interventions. International Energy Policies and Programmes Evaluation Conference, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Ford, R., Walton, S., Stephenson, J. et al. (2017). Emerging energy transitions: PV uptake beyond subsidies. Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 117, 138–50.Google Scholar
Geels, F.W. (2002). Technical transitions as evolutionary reconfiguration processes: a multi-level perspective and a case-study. Research Policy 31, 1257–74.Google Scholar
Giddens, A. (1984). The Constitution of Society. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Gnoth., D. (2016). Residential mobility and changing energy related behaviour (Thesis, Doctor of Philosophy). University of Otago.Google Scholar
Hays, S. (1994). Structure and agency and the sticky problem of culture. Sociological Theory, 12 (1), 5772.Google Scholar
Hoicka, C. (2012). Understanding Pro-Environmental Behaviour as Process: Assessing the Importance of Program Structure and (Doctoral dissertation, University of Waterloo).Google Scholar
Hopkins, D. (2017). Destabilising automobility? The emergent mobilities of generation Y. Ambio, 46(3), 371–83.Google Scholar
Hopkins, D., & McCarthy, A. (2016). Change trends in urban freight delivery: A qualitative inquiry. Geoforum, 74, 158–70.Google Scholar
Hopkins, D., & Stephenson, J. (2014). Generation Y mobilities through the lens of energy cultures: a preliminary exploration of mobility cultures. Journal of Transport Geography, 38, 8891.Google Scholar
Hopkins, D., & Stephenson, J. (2016). The replication and reduction of automobility: Findings from Aotearoa New Zealand. Journal of Transport Geography, 56, 92101.Google Scholar
King, G., Stephenson, J., & Ford, R. (2014) PV in Blueskin: Drivers, barriers and enablers of uptake of household photovoltaic systems in the Blueskin communities. Centre for Sustainability, University of Otago, New Zealand.Google Scholar
Kurz, T., Gardner, B., Verplankem, B., Abraham, C (2015). Habitual behaviour or patterns of practice? Explaining and changing repetitive climate-relevant actions. WIREs Climate Change, 6,113–28.Google Scholar
Latour, B. (2005). Reassembling the Social: An introduction to Actor–Network Theory. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Lawson, R., Williams, J. (2012). Understanding energy cultures. Annual conference of the Australia and New Zealand Academy of Marketing (ANZMAC), December 2012, University of New South Wales, AdelaideGoogle Scholar
Manouseli, D., Anderson, B., & Nagarajan, M. (2018). Domestic water demand during droughts in temperate climates: Synthesising evidence for an integrated framework. Water Resources Management, 32 (2), 433–47.Google Scholar
McKague, F., Lawson, R., Scott, M. and Wooliscroft, B. (2016). Understanding the energy consumption choices and coping mechanisms of fuel poor households in New Zealand. New Zealand Sociology, 31(1), 106–26.Google Scholar
Midgely, G., (2003). Systems Thinking. Sage publications, London.Google Scholar
Moezzi, M., Janda, K. B., & Rotmann, S. (2017). Using stories, narratives, and storytelling in energy and climate change research. Energy Research & Social Science, 31, 110.Google Scholar
Reckwitz, A. (2002). Toward a theory of social practices: a development in culturalist theorizing. European Journal of Social Theory, 5(2), 243–63.Google Scholar
Røpke, I. (2009). Theories of practice—new inspiration for ecological economic studies on consumption. Ecological Economics, 68 (10), 24902497.Google Scholar
Schatzki, T. (2002). The Site of the Social: A philosophical account of the constitution of social life and change. Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, PA.Google Scholar
Scott, M. G., McCarthy, A., Ford, R., Stephenson, J., & Gorrie, S. (2016). Evaluating the impact of energy interventions: home audits vs. community events. Energy Efficiency, 9(6), 1221–40.Google Scholar
Scott, M.G. and Lawson, R. (2017). The road code: Encouraging more efficient driving practices in New Zealand, Journal of Energy Efficiency, 110Google Scholar
Shove, E. (2003). Comfort, Cleanliness and Convenience: The social organisation of normality. Berg: Oxford.Google Scholar
Shove, E., & Pantzar, M. (2007). Recruitment and reproduction: the careers and carriers of digital photography and floorball. Human Affairs, 17 (2), 154167.Google Scholar
Shove, E. & Spurling, N. (2013). Sustainable Practices: Social theory and climate change. Routledge, Abingdon.Google Scholar
Stephenson, J. (2018). Sustainability cultures: An actor-centred interpretation of cultural theory. Energy Research and Social Science, 44, 242249.Google Scholar
Stephenson, J., Barton, B., Carrington, G. et al. (2010). Energy cultures: A framework for understanding energy behaviours. Energy Policy, 38: 6120–9.Google Scholar
Stephenson, J., Barton, B., Carrington, G. et al. (2015a). The energy cultures framework: Exploring the role of norms, practices and material culture in shaping energy behaviour in New Zealand. Energy Research & Social Science, 7, 117–23.Google Scholar
Stephenson, J., Hopkins, D., Doering, A. (2015b). Conceptualizing transport transitions: Energy Cultures as an organizing framework. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Energy & Environment, 4, 354–64.Google Scholar
Stephenson, J., Barton, B., Carrington, G. et al. (2016). Energy Cultures Policy Briefs. Centre for Sustainability, University of Otago. Retrieved from https://ourarchive.otago.ac.nz/handle/10523/7104Google Scholar
Sweeney, J. C., Kresling, J., Webb, D., Soutar, G. N., Mazzarol, T. (2013). Energy saving behaviours: Development of a practice-based model. Energy Policy, 61, 371381.Google Scholar
von Bertalanffy, L. (1968). General System Theory: Foundations, development, applications. George Braziller, Inc., New York.Google Scholar
Walton, S., Doering, A., Gabriel, C., Ford, R. (2014). Energy Transitions: Lighting in Vanuatu. Report prepared for The Australian Aid – Governance for Growth Programme. Retrieved from https://ourarchive.otago.ac.nz/handle/10523/4859Google Scholar
Walton, S., Zhang, A., & O’Kane, C. (2019). Energy eco‐innovations for sustainable development: Exploring organizational strategic capabilities through an energy cultures framework. Business Strategy and the Environment, 29(3), 812826.Google Scholar
Warde, A. (2005). Consumption and theories of practice. Journal of Consumer Culture, 5(2), 131–53.Google Scholar
Young, W., & Middlemiss, L. (2012). A rethink of how policy and social science approach changing individuals’ actions on greenhouse gas emissions. Energy Policy, 41, 742–7.Google Scholar

References

Ambrose- Oji, B., Wallace, J., Lawrence, A., and Stewart, A. (2010) Forestry Commission working with the Third Sector. Farnham, Surrey: Forest Research report to Forestry Commission England.Google Scholar
Ambrose-Oji, B. (2011) Volunteering and Forestry Commission Wales: scope, opportunities and barriers. Farnham, Surrey: Forest Research report to Forestry Commission Wales.Google Scholar
Ambrose-Oji, B., Lawrence, A., and Stewart, A. (2015) Community based forest enterprises in Britain: two organising typologies. Forest Policy and Economics 58: 6574.Google Scholar
Arts, B. (2014) Assessing forest governance from a ‘Triple G’ perspective: government, governance, governmentality. Forest Policy and Economics 49: 1722.Google Scholar
Bäckstrand, K., and Lövbrand, E. (2006) Planting trees to mitigate climate change: contested discourses of ecological modernization, green governmentality and civic environmentalism. Global Environmental Politics 6: 5075.Google Scholar
Belsky, J. M. (2015) Community forestry engagement with market forces: a comparative perspective from Bhutan and Montana. Forest Policy and Economics 58: 2936.Google Scholar
Berkes, F. (2017) Environmental governance for the Anthropocene? Social-Ecological systems, resilience, and collaborative learning. Sustainability 9: 1232.Google Scholar
Bixler, R. P. (2014) From community forest management to polycentric governance: assessing evidence from the bottom up. Society and Natural Resources 27: 155169.Google Scholar
Blaikie, P. (2006) Is small really beautiful? Community-based natural resource management in Malawi and Botswana. World Development 34: 1942–1957.Google Scholar
Blomley, T., Edwards, K., Kingazi, S., et al. (2017) When community forestry meets REDD+: has REDD+ helped address implementation barriers to participatory forest management in Tanzania? Journal of Eastern African Studies 11: 549570.Google Scholar
Buijs, A., Hansen, R., Van der Jagt, A., et al. (2019) Mosaic governance for urban green infrastructure: upscaling active citizenship from a local government perspective. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening 40: 5362.Google Scholar
Buijs, A. E., Mattijssen, T. J. M, Van der Jagt, A. P. N., et al. (2016) Active citizenship for urban green infrastructure: fostering the diversity and dynamics of citizen contributions through mosaic governance. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 22: 16.Google Scholar
Cadman, T., Maraseni, T., Ok Ma, H., and Lopez-Casero, F. (2017) Five years of REDD+governance: the use of market mechanisms as a response to anthropogenic climate change. Forest Policy and Economics 79: 816.Google Scholar
Carlisle, K. and Gruby, R. L. (2017) Polycentric systems of governance: a theoretical model for the commons. Policy Studies Journal 47: 927–52.Google Scholar
Chapin, F. S., Knapp, C. N., Brinkman, T. J., et al. (2016) Community-empowered adaptation for self-reliance. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 19: 6775.Google Scholar
Dearing, J. A. (2012) Navigating the perfect storm: research strategies for social-ecological systems in a rapidly evolving world. Environmental Management 49: 767–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Defra. (2013) Government Forestry and Woodlands Policy Statement. London: Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs.Google Scholar
Dupuits, E. (2015) Transnational self-help networks and community forestry: a theoretical framework. Forest Policy and Economics 58: 511.Google Scholar
Eckerberg, K., and Buizer, M. (2017) Promises and dilemmas in forest fire management decision-making: exploring conditions for community engagement in Australia and Sweden. Forest Policy and Economics 80: 133–40.Google Scholar
Folke, C., Hahn, T., Olsson, P., and Norberg, J. (2005) Adaptive governance of social-ecological systems. Annual Review of Environment and Resources 30: 441–73.Google Scholar
Folke, C., Pritchard, L., Berkes, F, Colding, J., and Svedin, U. (2007) The problem of fit between ecosystems and institutions: ten years later. Ecology and Society 12(1): 30.Google Scholar
Gatto, P., and Bogataj, N. (2015) Disturbances, robustness and adaptation in forest commons: comparative insights from two cases in the Southeastern Alps. Forest Policy and Economics 58: 5664.Google Scholar
George, C., and Reed, M. G. (2017) Operationalising just sustainability: towards a model for place-based governance. Local Environment 22: 1105–23.Google Scholar
Giddens, A. (2002) Runaway World: How globalisation is shaping our lives, Oxford: Routledge.Google Scholar
Hajer, M., and Versteeg, W. (2005) A decade of discourse analysis of environmental politics: Achievements, challenges, perspectives. Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning 7: 175–84.Google Scholar
Independent Panel on Forestry. (2012) Independent Panel Report on Forestry: Final Report. London: report to Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs.Google Scholar
Jerome, G., Mell, I., and Shaw, D. (2017) Re-defining the characteristics of environmental volunteering: creating a typology of community-scale green infrastructure. Environmental Research 158: 399408.Google Scholar
Kluvánková, T. and Gezík, V. (2016) Survival of commons? Institutions for robust forest social-ecological systems. Forest Economics 24: 175–85.Google Scholar
Konijnendijk van den Bosch, C. (2012) Innovations in urban forest governance in Europe. In Johnston, M. and Percival, G. (eds) Trees, People and the Built Environment. Proceedings of the Urban Trees Research Conference, 13–14 April 2011. Edinburgh: Forestry Commission, pp. 141–47.Google Scholar
Lawrence, A. and Dandy, N. (2012) Governance and the urban forest. In: Johnston, M. and Percival, G. (eds) Trees, People and the Built Environment. Proceedings of the Urban Trees Research Conference, 13–14 April 2011. Edinburgh: Forestry Commission, 148–58.Google Scholar
Lawrence, A. and Ambrose-Oji, B. (2013) A framework for sharing experiences of community woodland groups. Research Note. Edinburgh: Forestry Commission.Google Scholar
Lawrence, A. and Ambrose-Oji, B. (2014) Beauty, friends, power, money: navigating the impacts of community woodlands. Geographical Journal 181: 268–79.Google Scholar
Lawrence, A. and Molteno, S. (2012) Community forest governance: a rapid evidence review. Farnham, Surrey: Forest Research, 141.Google Scholar
Lawrence, A., Ambrose- Oji, B. and O’Brien, E. (2014) Current approaches to supporting and working with communities on the National Forest Estate: feedback from community organisations and FES delivery staff Roslin, Midlothian: Forest Research.Google Scholar
Lawrence, A., Anglezarke, B., Frost, B., et al. (2009) What does community forestry mean in a devolved Great Britain? The International Forestry Review 11: 281297.Google Scholar
Lawrence, A., Van der Jagt, A., Ambrose- Oji, B., and Stewart, A. (2014) Local authorities in Scotland: a catalyst for community engagement in urban forests? Trees, People and the Built Environment II. Proceedings of the Urban Trees Research Conference, 2-3 April 2014. University of Birmingham. Institute of Chartered Foresters, Birmingham.Google Scholar
O’Brien, L., Townsend, M. and Ebden, M. (2008) ‘I’d like to think that when I’m gone I will have left this a better place’: environmental volunteering – motivations, barriers and benefits. Report to the Scottish Forestry Trust and Forestry Commission.Google Scholar
Ostrom, E. (2010) Polycentric systems for coping with collective action and global environmental change. Global Environmental Change 20: 550–57.Google Scholar
Parkins, J. R., Dunn, M., Reed, M. G., and Sinclair, A. John. (2016) Forest governance as neoliberal strategy: a comparative case study of the Model Forest Program in Canada. Journal of Rural Studies 45: 270–78.Google Scholar
Premrl, T., Udovč, A., Bogataj, N., and Krč, J. (2015) From restitution to revival: a case of commons re-establishment and restitution in Slovenia. Forest Policy and Economics 59: 1926.Google Scholar
Primmer, E., Jokinen, P., Blicharska, M., et al. (2015) Governance of ecosystem services: a framework for empirical analysis. Ecosystem Services 16: 158–66.Google Scholar
Ribot, J. (2004) Waiting for Democracy: The Politics of Choice in Natural Resource Decentralisation, Washington, DC: World Resource Institute.Google Scholar
Rosenau, J., and Czempiel, E. (1992) Governance Without Government: Order and Change in World Politics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Swade, K., Walker, A., Walton, M., and Barker, K. (2013) Community management of Local Authority woodland in England: A report to Forest Research. Shared Assets report to Forest Research.Google Scholar
Teder, M., and Kaimre, P. (2017) The participation of stakeholders in the policy processes and their satisfaction with results: a case of Estonian forestry policy. Forest Policy and Economics 89: 5462.Google Scholar
Tidey, P. and Pollard, A. (2010) Characterising community woodlands in England and exploring support needs. Small Woods Association report to Forest Research.Google Scholar
van der Jagt, A., Elands, B., Ambrose- Oji, B., Gerőházi, É., and Steen Møller, M. (2016) Participatory governance of urban green spaces: trends and practices in the European Union. Nordic Journal of Architectural Research 3: 1134.Google Scholar
Wagenaar, H., Healey, P., Laino, G., et al. (2015) The transformative potential of civic enterprise. Planning Theory and Practice 16: 557585.Google Scholar
Weber, N. (2017) Participation or involvement? Development of forest strategies on national and sub-national level in Germany. Forest Policy and Economics 89: 98106.Google Scholar
Wilson, S. J. and Cagalanan, D. (2016) Governing restoration: strategies, adaptations and innovations for tomorrow’s forest landscapes. World Development Perspectives 4: 1115.Google Scholar
Wydra, Doris, and Pülzl, Helga (2013). Sustainability governance in democracies. International Journal of Social Ecology and Sustainable Development 4(1): 86107. doi:10.4018/jsesd.2013010105Google Scholar

References

Ascui, Francisco, and Lovell, Heather. “As frames collide: Making sense of carbon accounting.Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal 24.8 (2011): 978999.Google Scholar
Ascui, Francisco, and Lovell, Heather. “Carbon accounting and the construction of competence.Journal of Cleaner Production 36 (2012): 4859.Google Scholar
Bachram, Heidi. “Climate fraud and carbon colonialism: The new trade in greenhouse gases.Capitalism Nature Socialism 15.4 (2004): 520.Google Scholar
Bäckstrand, Karin, and Lövbrand, Eva. “Planting trees to mitigate climate change: Contested discourses of ecological modernization, green governmentality and civic environmentalism.Global Environmental Politics 6.1 (2006): 5075.Google Scholar
Bigger, Patrick. “Hybridity, possibility: Degrees of marketization in tradable permit systems.Environment and Planning A 50.3 (2018): 512530.Google Scholar
Bailey, Ian, Gouldson, Andy, and Newell, Peter. “Ecological modernisation and the governance of carbon: A critical analysis.Antipode 43.3 (2011): 682703.Google Scholar
Bailey, Ian, and Wilson, Geoff A.. “Theorising transitional pathways in response to climate change: Technocentrism, ecocentrism, and the carbon economy.Environment and Planning A 41 (2009): 23242341.Google Scholar
Betsill, Michele and Hoffman, Matthew J.. “The contours of ‘cap and trade’: The evolution of emissions trading systems for greenhouse gases.Review of Policy Research 28.1 (2011): 83106.Google Scholar
Böhm, Steffen, and Dabhi, Siddhartha (eds.) Upsetting the Offset: The Political Economy of Carbon Markets. (2009) London: MayFly Books.Google Scholar
Böhm, Steffen, Misoczky, Maria Ceci, and Moog, Sandra. “Greening capitalism? A Marxist critique of carbon markets.Organization Studies 33.11 (2012): 16171638.Google Scholar
Bohr, Jeremiah, and Dunlap, Riley E.. “Key topics in environmental sociology, 1990–2014: Results from a computational text analysis.” Environmental Sociology (2017): 115.Google Scholar
Bohr, Jeremiah. “The ‘climatism’ cartel: Why climate change deniers oppose market-based mitigation policy.Environmental Politics 25.5 (2016): 812830.Google Scholar
Bond, P. “Carbon capital’s trial, the Kyoto protocol’s demise, and openings for climate justice.” Capitalism Nature Socialism 22 (2011): 317Google Scholar
Bonds, Eric. “The knowledge-shaping process: Elite mobilization and environmental policy.Critical Sociology 37.4 (2011): 429446.Google Scholar
Bonds, Eric. “Beyond denialism: Think tank approaches to climate change.Sociology Compass 10.4 (2016a): 306317.Google Scholar
Bonds, Eric. “Losing the Arctic: The US corporate community, the national-security state, and climate change.Environmental Sociology 2.1 (2016b): 517.Google Scholar
Boyd, Emily, Boykoff, Maxwell, and Newell, Peter. “The ‘new’ carbon economy: What’s new?Antipode 43.3 (2011): 601611.Google Scholar
Braun, Marcel. “The evolution of emissions trading in the European Union: The role of policy networks, knowledge and policy entrepreneurs.Accounting, Organizations and Society 34.3–4 (2009): 469487.Google Scholar
Brown, Katrina, and Corbera, Esteve. “Exploring equity and sustainable development in the new carbon economy.” Climate Policy 3S1 (2003): S41S56.Google Scholar
Brulle, Robert J.Institutionalizing delay: Foundation funding and the creation of US climate change counter-movement organizations.Climatic Change 122.4 (2014): 681694.Google Scholar
Bryant, Gareth. “The politics of carbon market design: Rethinking the techno-politics and post-politics of climate change.” Antipode 48.4 (2016): 877898.Google Scholar
Bryant, Gareth. “Nature as accumulation strategy? Finance, nature, and value in carbon markets.Annals of the Association of American Geographers 103.3 (2018): 605619.Google Scholar
Bumpus, Adam G., and Liverman, Diana M.. “Accumulation by decarbonization and the governance of carbon offsets.Economic Geography 84.2 (2008): 127155.Google Scholar
Bumpus, Adam G.The matter of carbon: Understanding the materiality of tCO2e in carbon offsets.Antipode 43.3 (2011): 612638.Google Scholar
Callon, Michel. “Civilizing markets: Carbon trading between in vitro and in vivo experiments.” Accounting, Organizations and Society 34.3–4 (2009): 535548.Google Scholar
Carmody, Padraig, and Taylor, David. “Globalization, land grabbing, and the present-day colonial state in Uganda: Ecolonization and its impacts.The Journal of Environment & Development 25.1 (2016): 100126.Google Scholar
Carton, Wim. “Environmental protection as market pathology?: Carbon trading and the dialectics of the ‘double movement’.Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 32.6 (2014): 10021018.Google Scholar
Cooper, Mark H., and Rosin, Christopher. “Absolving the sins of emission: The politics of regulating agricultural greenhouse gas emissions in New Zealand.Journal of Rural Studies 36 (2014): 391400.Google Scholar
Cooper, Mark H.Measure for measure? Commensuration, commodification, and metrology in emissions markets and beyond.Environment and Planning A 47.9 (2015): 17871804.Google Scholar
Descheneau, Philippe. “The currencies of carbon: Carbon money and its social meaning.Environmental Politics 21.4 (2012): 604620.Google Scholar
Descheneau, Philippe, and Paterson, Matthew. “Between desire and routine: Assembling environment and finance in carbon markets.Antipode 43.3 (2011): 662681.Google Scholar
Downey, Liam, and Strife, Susan. “Inequality, democracy, and the environment.” Organization and Environment 23.1 (2010): 155188Google Scholar
Dunlap, Riley E.The maturation and diversification of environmental sociology: From constructivism and realism to agnosticism and pragmatism.” In The International Handbook of Environmental Sociology ed. Redclift, Michael R and Woodgate, Graham (2010) Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham UK and Northampton, MA, pp. 1532.Google Scholar
Dunlap, Riley E., and Jacques, Peter J.. “Climate change denial books and conservative think tanks: Exploring the connection.American Behavioral Scientist 57.6 (2013): 699731.Google Scholar
Engels, Anita. “The European Emissions Trading Scheme: An exploratory study of how companies learn to account for carbon.Accounting, Organizations and Society 34. 3–4 (2009): 488498.Google Scholar
Fourcade, Marion, and Kieran, Healy. “Moral views of market society.” Annual Review of Sociology 33 (2007): 285311.Google Scholar
Gilbertson, Tamra, and Reyes, Oscar. “Carbon trading, how it works and why it fails.” Critical Currents: Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation Occasional Paper Series. (2009) Uppsala: Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation.Google Scholar
Goodman, Michael K., and Boyd, Emily. “A social life for carbon? Commodification, markets and care.The Geographical Journal 177.2 (2011): 102109.Google Scholar
Hultman, Nathan E., Pulver, Simone, Guimarães, Leticia, Deshmukh, Ranjit, and Kane, Jennifer. “Carbon market risks and rewards: Firm perceptions of CDM investment decisions in Brazil and India.Energy Policy 40 (2012): 90102.Google Scholar
Jackson, Sue, Palmer, Lisa, McDonald, Fergus, and Bumpus, Adam. “Cultures of carbon and the logic of care: The possibilities for carbon enrichment and its cultural signature.Annals of the American Association of Geographers 107.4 (2017): 867882.Google Scholar
Jacques, Peter J., Dunlap, Riley E., and Freeman, Mark. “The organisation of denial: Conservative think tanks and environmental scepticism.Environmental Politics 27.3 (2008): 349385.Google Scholar
Jordan, Andrew, and Huitema, Dave. “Policy innovation in a changing climate: Sources, patterns and effects.Global Environmental Change 29 (2014): 387394.Google Scholar
Kaup, Brent Z.Markets, nature, and society: Embedding economic & environmental sociology.Sociological Theory 33.3 (2015): 280296.Google Scholar
Kaswan, Alice. “Environmental justice and environmental law.Fordam Environmental Law Review 24.2 (2013): 149179.Google Scholar
KnoxHayes, Janelle. “Negotiating climate legislation: Policy path dependence and coalition stabilization.Regulation & Governance 6.4 (2012): 545567.Google Scholar
Knox-Hayes, Janelle. “Creating the carbon market institution: Analysis of the organizations and relationships that build the market.Competition & Change 14.3–4 (2010): 176202.Google Scholar
Lane, Richard. “The promiscuous history of market efficiency: The development of early emissions trading systems.Climate Policy 21.4 (2012): 583603.Google Scholar
Lansing, David M.Performing carbon’s materiality: The production of carbon offsets and the framing of exchange.Environment and Planning A 44.1 (2012): 204220.Google Scholar
Lederer, Markus. “Market making via regulation: The role of the state in carbon markets.Regulation & Governance 6.4 (2012): 524544.Google Scholar
Lederer, Markus. “The politics of carbon markets in the global south.” The Politics of Carbon Markets (2014): 133149.Google Scholar
Lederer, Markus. “Carbon trading: Who gets what, when, and how?Global Environmental Politics 17.3 (2017): 134140.Google Scholar
Liu, John Chung-En. “Pacifying uncooperative carbon: Examining the materiality of the carbon market.Economy and Society 46.3–4 (2017): 522544.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lo, Alex Y.National development and carbon trading: The symbolism of Chinese climate capitalism.Eurasian Geography and Economics 56.2 (2015): 111126.Google Scholar
Lo, Alex Y.Challenges to the development of carbon markets in China.” Climate Policy 16.1 (2016): 109124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lohmann, Larry. “Marketing and making carbon dumps: Commodification, calculation and counter-factuals in climate change mitigation.Science as Culture 14.3 (2005): 203235.Google Scholar
Lohmann, Larry. “Carbon trading: A critical conversation on climate change, privatisation and power.Development Dialogue 48 (2006).Google Scholar
Lohmann, Larry. “Uncertainty markets and carbon markets: Variations on Polanyian themes.New Political Economy 15.2 (2010): 225254.Google Scholar
Lohmann, Larry. “A rejoinder to Matthew Paterson and Peter Newell.” Development and Change 43 (2012): 11771184.Google Scholar
London, Jonathan, Karner, Alex, Sze, Julie, Rowan, Dana, Gamiazzio, Garardo, and Niemeier, Deb. “Racing climate change: Collaboration and conflict in California’s global climate change policy arena.Global Environmental Change 23 (2013): 791799.Google Scholar
Lövbrand, Eva, and Stripple, Johannes. “Making climate change governable: Accounting for carbon as sinks, credits and personal budgets.Critical Policy Studies 5.2 (2011): 187200.Google Scholar
Lovell, Heather, and Donald, MacKenzie. “Accounting for carbon: The role of accounting professional organisations in governing climate change.Antipode 43.3 (2011): 704730.Google Scholar
Lovell, Heather, and Liverman, Diana. “Understanding carbon offset technologies.New Political Economy 15.2 (2010): 255273.Google Scholar
Lyons, Kristen, and Westoby, Peter. “Carbon colonialism and the new land grab: Plantation forestry in Uganda and its livelihood impacts.Journal of Rural Studies 36 (2014): 1321.Google Scholar
MacKenzie, Donald. “Making things the same: Gases, emission rights and the politics of carbon markets.Accounting, Organizations and Society 34.3–4 (2009b): 440455.Google Scholar
MacKenzie, Donald. Material Markets: How Economic Agents are Constructed. (2009a) Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Malin, Stephanie A. The Price of Nuclear Power: Uranium Communities and Environmental Justice. (2015) New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Meckling, Jonas. Carbon Coalitions: Business, Climate Politics, and the Rise of Emissions Trading. (2011) Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Mol, Arthur P. J. “Carbon flows, financial markets and climate change mitigation.” Environmental Development 1 (2012): 1024Google Scholar
Newell, Peter and Paterson, Matthew. “The politics of the carbon economy.” In The Politics of Climate Change: A Survey ed. Boykoff, Maxwell T.. (2009) Routledge: London. pp.7795.Google Scholar
Newell, Peter, and Paterson, Matthew. Climate Capitalism: Global Warming and the Transformation of the Global Economy. (2010) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,Google Scholar
Oreskes, Naomi and Conway, Erik M.. Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming. (2010) New York: Bloomsbury.Google Scholar
Osborne, Tracey, and Shapiro-Garza., ElizabethEmbedding carbon markets: Complicating commodification of ecosystem services in Mexico’s forests.Annals of the American Association of Geographers 108.1 (2018): 88105.Google Scholar
Paterson, Matthew. “Legitimation and accumulation in climate change governance.New Political Economy 15.3 (2010): 345368.Google Scholar
Paterson, Matthew and Xavier, P-Laberge. “Political economies of climate change.Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change 9.2 (2018): e506.Google Scholar
Paterson, Matthew, and Stripple, Johannes. “Virtuous carbon.Environmental Politics 21 .4 (2012): 563582.Google Scholar
Paterson, Matthew, Hoffmann, Matthew, Betsill, Michele, and Bernstein, Steven. “The micro foundations of policy diffusion toward complex global governance: An analysis of the transnational carbon emission trading network.Comparative Political Studies 47 .3 (2014): 420449.Google Scholar
Pulver, Simone. “Making sense of corporate environmentalism: An environmental contestation approach to analyzing the causes and consequences of the climate change policy split in the oil industry.Organization & Environment 20.1 (2007): 4483.Google Scholar
Rea, Christopher M.Theorizing command-and-commodify regulation: The case of species conservation banking in the United States.Theory and Society 46.1 (2017): 2156.Google Scholar
Sandel, Michael J. “It’s immoral to buy the right to pollute.” New York Times December 17, (1997): A29.Google Scholar
Sapinski, Jean Philippe. “Climate capitalism and the global corporate elite network.Environmental Sociology 1.4 (2015): 268279.Google Scholar
Sapinski, Jean Philippe. “Constructing climate capitalism: Corporate power and the global climate policyplanning network.Global Networks 16.1 (2016): 89111.Google Scholar
Sapinski, J. P.Corporate climate policy-planning in the global polity: A network analysis.” Critical Sociology 45.4-5 (2019): 565582.Google Scholar
Scott, Lauren N., and Johnson, Erik W.. “From fringe to core? The integration of environmental sociology.Environmental Sociology 3.1 (2017): 1729.Google Scholar
Simons, Arno, and Voß, Jan-Peter. “The concept of instrument constituencies: Accounting for dynamics and practices of knowing governance.” Policy and Society 37.1 (2018): 122.Google Scholar
Smith, Neil. “Nature as accumulation strategy.Socialist Register 43 (2006): 1941.Google Scholar
Smith, Kevin, Reyes, Oscar, and Byakola, Timothy. The Carbon Neutral Myth: Offset Indulgences for Your Climate Sins. (2007) Amsterdam: Carbon Trade Watch.Google Scholar
Spaargaren, Gert and Mol, Arthur P. J.. “Carbon flows, carbon markets, and low-carbon lifestyles: Reflecting on the role of markets in climate governance.Environmental Politics 22.1 (2013): 174193.Google Scholar
Spash, Clive L.The brave new world of carbon trading.New Political Economy 15.2 (2010): 169195.Google Scholar
Stephan, Benjamin and Paterson, Matthew. “The politics of carbon markets: An introduction.Environmental Politics 21.4 (2012): 545562.Google Scholar
Stuart, Diana, Gunderson, Ryan, and Petersen, Brian. “Climate Change and the Polanyian counter-movement: Carbon markets or degrowth?” New Political Economy 24.1 (2017): 114.Google Scholar
Sze, Julie, Gambirazzio, Gerardo, Karner, Alex, Dana Rowan, Jonathan London, Deb Niemeier. “Best in show? Climate and environmental justice policy in California?Environmental Justice 2.4 (2009): 179184.Google Scholar
Voß, Jan-Peter, and Simons, Arno. “Instrument constituencies and the supply side of policy innovation: The social life of emissions trading.Environmental Politics 23.5 (2014): 735754.Google Scholar
Voß, Jan Peter.Innovation of governance: The case of emissions trading.” In Governance of Innovation: Firms, Clusters and Institutions in a Changing Setting. Arentsen, Maarten J., van Rossum, Wouter, and Stenge, Albert E (2010) Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, pp. 125148.Google Scholar
Wara, M. “Is the global carbon market working?Nature 445. 8 February (2007): 595596.Google Scholar
World Bank. State and Trends of Carbon Pricing 2017 (2017) Washington, DC: World Bank Group.Google Scholar
Yun, Sun-Jin, Dowan, Ku, and Han, Jin-Yi. “Climate policy networks in South Korea: Alliances and conflicts.Climate policy 14.2 (2014): 283301.Google Scholar
Zelizer, Viviana A. The Social Meaning of Money. (1997). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar

References

Barbi, F., & Ferreira, L. 2013. Climate change in Brazilian cities: Policy strategies and responses to global warming. International Journal of Environmental Science and Development 4(1): 4951.Google Scholar
Barbi, F.; Ferreira, L. & Guo, S. 2016. Climate change challenges and China’s response: mitigation and governance. Journal of Chinese Governance 1(2): 324339.Google Scholar
Basso, L., & Viola, E. 2014. O Progresso da política energética chinesa e os desafios na transição para o desenvolvimento de baixo carbono, 2006–2013. Revista Brasileira de Política Internacional 57: 174192.Google Scholar
Beck, U. 1992. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Beck, U. 1995. Ecological Politics in an Age of Risk. Cambridge: Polity.Google Scholar
Beck, U. 2000. Risk Society Revisited: Theory, Politics and Research Programmes. In The Risk Society and Beyond: Critical Issues for Social Theory, ed. Adam, B, Beck, U, & Loon, J. V. London: Sage Publications, pp. 211239.Google Scholar
Beck, U. 2009. World at Risk. Cambridge: Polity.Google Scholar
Beck, U. 2010. Climate for change, or how to create a green modernity? Theory, Culture & Society 27(2–3): 254266.Google Scholar
Betsill, M. M., & Bulkeley, H. 2007. Looking back and thinking ahead: A decade of cities and climate change research. Local Governments 12(5): 447456.Google Scholar
Bizikova, L., Burch, S., Cohen, S. & Robinson, J. 2010. Linking sustainable development with climate change adaptation and mitigation. In Climate Change, Ethics and Human Security eds. O’Brien, K. L., Clair, A. L. St. & Kristoffersen, B. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bulkeley, H., & Betsill, M. 2003. Cities and Climate Change – Urban Sustainability and Global Environmental Governance. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bulkeley, H., & Kern, K. 2006. Local government and the governing of climate change in Germany and the UK. Urban Studies 43(12): 22372259.Google Scholar
Bulkeley, H., & Newell, P. 2010. Governing Climate Change. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Burch, S., & Robinson, J. 2007. A framework for explaining the links between capacity and action in response to global climate change. Climate Policy 7(4): 304316.Google Scholar
Dunlap, R., & Brulle, R. 2015. Climate Change and Society. Sociological Perspectives. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Dodman, D. 2009. Blaming cities for climate change? An analysis of urban greenhouse gas emissions inventories. Environment and Urbanization 21(1): 185198.Google Scholar
Ferreira, L. (ORG). 2017. O Desafio das mudanças climáticas. Os casos Brasil e China. Jundiaí, Brazil: Paco Editorial.Google Scholar
Ferreira, L. 2018. The Sociology of Environmental Issues. Theoretical and Empirical Investigations. Curitiba, Brazil: CRV Editor.Google Scholar
Ferreira, Leila, and Martinelli, M. 2016. Anthropocene: Governing Climate Change in China and Brazil. Sociology and Anthropology 4(12): 10841092. www.hrpub.org DOI:10.13189/sa.2016.041207.Google Scholar
Ferreira, Leila, Martins, R. D, Barbi, F, et al. 2012. Risk and Climate Change in Brazilian Coastal Cities. In Risk and Social Theory in Environmental Management eds. Measham, T. G. & Lockie., S Collingwood: CSIRO Publishing, pp. 133146.Google Scholar
Ferreira, Leila, and Barbi, F. 2016. The challenge of global environmental change in the Anthropocene: An analysis of Brazil and China. Chinese Political Science Review 1(4): 685697.Google Scholar
Giddens, A. 1990. The Consequences of Modernity. Stanford, CA : Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Giddens, A. 2000. Runaway World. How Globalization Is Reshaping Our Lives. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Giddens, A. 2009. The Politics of Climate Change. Cambridge: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Gupta, J. 2007. The multi-level governance challenge of climate change. Journal of Integrative Environmental Sciences 4(3): 131137.Google Scholar
Hoornweg, D., Sugar, L, L., and Gomez, C. L. T. 2011. Cities and greenhouse gas emissions: moving forward. Environment and Urbanization 23(1): 207227.Google Scholar
IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. 2007. Summary for Policymakers. In Climate Change 2007: Mitigation. Contribution of Working Group III to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, eds. Metz, B, Davidson, O. R, Bosch, P. R, Dave, R & Meyer, L. A, Cambridge,: Cambridge University Press, pp. 123.Google Scholar
IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. 2001. Summary for Policymakers. In Climate Change 2001: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group II to the Third Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change eds. McCarthy, J. J, Canziani, O. F, Leary, N. A, Dokken, D. J, & White, K. S. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 117.Google Scholar
Klein, R. J. T., Schipper, E. L. F., & Dessai, S. 2005. Integrating mitigation and adaptation into climate and development policy: three research questions. Environmental Science & Policy, 8(1): 579588.Google Scholar
Newell, P., Patterberg, P., & Schroeder, H. 2012. Multiactor Governance and the Environment. Annual Review of Environment and Resources, 37: 365387.Google Scholar
Nobre, Carlos A. 2011. Vulnerabilidades das Megacidades Brasileiras às Mudanças Climáticas: Região Metropolitana de São Paulo: Relatório Final. São José dos Campos, SP Brasil: Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais.Google Scholar
OC – Observatório do Clima. 2014. Análise da evolução das emissões de GEE no Brasil (1990–2012). Documento Síntese. São Paulo: Instituto de Energia e Meio Ambiente.Google Scholar
Okereke, C., Bulkeley, H., & Schroeder, H. 2009. Conceptualizing Climate Governance Beyond the International Regime. Global Environmental Politics 9(1): 5878.Google Scholar
PBMC. Painel Brasileiro de Mudanças Climáticas. 2013. Contribuição do Grupo de Trabalho 2 ao Primeiro Relatório de Avaliação Nacional do Painel Brasileiro de Mudanças Climáticas. Sumário Executivo do GT2. Rio de Janeiro, Brasil: PBMC.Google Scholar
Renn, O., & Klinke, A. 2012. Complexity, uncertainty and ambiguity in inclusive risk governance. In Risk and Social Theory in Environmental Management, eds. Measham, T. G. & Lockie, S. Collingwood: CSIRO Publishing, pp. 5976.Google Scholar
Satterthwaite, D. 2010. The contribution of cities to global warming and their potential contributions to solutions. Environment and Urbanization Asia 1(1): 112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Storbjörk, S. 2007. Governing climate adaptation in the local arena: Challenges of risk management and planning in Sweden. Local Environment 12(5): 457469.Google Scholar
UN-HABITAT (United Nations Human Settlements Programme). 2011. Cities and Climate Change: Global Report on Human Settlements. Earthscan.Google Scholar
Winkler, H., Baumert, K, Blanchard, K. O., Burch, S, and Robinson, J. 2007. What factors influence mitigative capacity? Energy Policy 35(1): 692703.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×