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POLI31556 Unit Summary. https://www.bris.ac.uk/unit-programme-catalogue/UnitDetails.jsa?ayrCode=19%2F20&unitCode=POLI31556.
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Brulle, R. J. & Norgaard, K. M. Avoiding cultural trauma: climate change and social inertia. Environmental Politics 28, 886–908 (2019).
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Barry, A. & Maslin, M. The politics of the anthropocene: a dialogue. Geo: Geography and Environment 3, (2016).
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Kaijser, A. & Kronsell, A. Climate change through the lens of intersectionality. Environmental Politics 23, 417–433 (2014).
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Sultana, F. Gendering Climate Change: Geographical Insights. The Professional Geographer 66, 372–381 (2014).
7.
Pickering, J. Ecological reflexivity: characterising an elusive virtue for governance in the Anthropocene. Environmental Politics 28, 1145–1166 (2019).
8.
Cameron Harrington , and Clifford Shearing. Security in the Anthropocene : Reflections on Safety and Care. (Transcipt Verlag, 2017).
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The Oxford handbook of global studies. (Oxford University Press, 2019).
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Stephan, B. & Paterson, M. The politics of carbon markets: an introduction. Environmental Politics 21, 545–562 (2012).
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Spash, C. Carbon Trading: A Critique. in The Oxford Handbook of Climate Change and Society (eds. Dryzek, J. S. & et al.) (2011).
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Paterson, M. & Stripple, J. Virtuous carbon. Environmental Politics 21, 563–582 (2012).
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Felli, R. Environment, not planning: the neoliberal depoliticisation of environmental policy by means of emissions trading. Environmental Politics 24, 641–660 (2015).
14.
Machin, A. Changing the story? The discourse of ecological modernisation in the European Union. Environmental Politics 28, 208–227 (2019).
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Rea, C. M. Regulatory thickening and the politics of market-oriented environmental policy. Environmental Politics 28, 1167–1191 (2019).
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Paterson, M. Selling Carbon: From International Climate Regime to Global Carbon Market. in The Oxford Handbook of Climate Change and Society.
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Caney, S. Markets, Morality and Climate Change: What, if Anything, is Wrong with Emissions Trading? New Political Economy 15, 197–224 (2010).
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Blum, M. & Lövbrand, E. The return of carbon offsetting? The discursive legitimation of new market arrangements in the Paris climate regime. Earth System Governance (2019) doi:10.1016/j.esg.2019.100028.
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Michaelowa, A., Shishlov, I. & Brescia, D. Evolution of international carbon markets: lessons for the Paris Agreement. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change (2019) doi:10.1002/wcc.613.
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Schneider, L. & La Hoz Theuer, S. Environmental integrity of international carbon market mechanisms under the Paris Agreement. Climate Policy 19, 386–400 (2019).
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Descheneau, P. The currencies of carbon: carbon money and its social meaning. Environmental Politics 21, 604–620 (2012).
22.
Layfield, D. Turning carbon into gold: the financialisation of international climate policy. Environmental Politics 22, 901–917 (2013).
23.
Villarrubia-Gómez, P., Cornell, S. E. & Fabres, J. Marine plastic pollution as a planetary boundary threat – The drifting piece in the sustainability puzzle. Marine Policy 96, 213–220 (2018).
24.
Dauvergne, P. The power of environmental norms: marine plastic pollution and the politics of microbeads. Environmental Politics 27, 579–597 (2018).
25.
Barnes, S. J. Out of sight, out of mind: Plastic waste exports, psychological distance and consumer plastic purchasing. Global Environmental Change 58, (2019).
26.
Vince, J. & Hardesty, B. D. Governance Solutions to the Tragedy of the Commons That Marine Plastics Have Become. Frontiers in Marine Science 5, (2018).
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Ostrom, E. Reflections on the commons. in Governing the commons: the evolution of institutions for collective action 1–28 (Cambridge University Press, 2015). doi:10.1017/CBO9781316423936.002.
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Villamayor-Tomas, S. & García-López, G. Social movements as key actors in governing the commons: Evidence from community-based resource management cases across the world. Global Environmental Change 53, 114–126 (2018).
29.
Hyun Jung Kim. Governing Fishing Stocks in Northeast Asia’s Disputed Waters: Preventing a ‘Tragedy of the Commons’? The International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law 33, 495–527.
30.
Floriane Clement, Wendy Jane Harcourt, Deepa Joshi and Chizu Sato. Feminist political ecologies of the commons and commoning. International Journal of the Commons 13, (2019).
31.
Kentaro Miyanaga and Daisaku Shimada. ‘The tragedy of the commons’ by underuse: toward a conceptual framework based on ecosystem services and satoyama perspective. International Journal of the Commons 12, (2018).
32.
Smith, H., Marrocoli, S., Garcia Lozano, A. & Basurto, X. Hunting for common ground between wildlife governance and commons scholarship. Conservation Biology 33, 9–21 (2019).
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Corinna Wallrapp, Markus Keck and Heiko Faust. Governing the yarshagumba ‘gold rush’: a comparative study of governance systems in the Kailash Landscape in India and Nepal. International Journal of the Commons 13, (2019).
34.
Pictou, S. The origins and politics, campaigns and demands by the international fisher peoples’ movement: an Indigenous perspective. Third World Quarterly 39, 1411–1420 (2018).
35.
Gunster, S. & Neubauer, R. J. (De)legitimating extractivism: the shifting politics of social licence. Environmental Politics 28, 707–726 (2019).
36.
Parson, S. & Ray, E. Sustainable Colonization: Tar Sands as Resource Colonialism. Capitalism Nature Socialism 29, 68–86 (2018).
37.
Whyte, Kyle. The Dakota Access Pipeline, Environmental Injustice, and U.S. Colonialism.
38.
LeQuesne, T. From Carbon Democracy to Carbon Rebellion: Countering Petro-Hegemony on the Frontlines of Climate Justice. Journal of World-Systems Research 25, 15–27 (2019).
39.
Quinn-Thibodeau, T. & Wu, B. NGOs and the Climate Justice Movement in the Age of Trumpism. Development 59, 251–256 (2016).
40.
Selby, J., Dahi, O. S., Fröhlich, C. & Hulme, M. Climate change and the Syrian civil war revisited. Political Geography 60, 232–244 (2017).
41.
Seter, H., Theisen, O. M. & Schilling, J. All about water and land? Resource-related conflicts in East and West Africa revisited. GeoJournal 83, 169–187 (2018).
42.
Gilman, N., Randall, D. & Schwartz, P. Climate Change and ‘Security’. in The Oxford Handbook of Climate Change and Society.
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Selby, J. & Hoffmann, C. Rethinking Climate Change, Conflict and Security. Geopolitics 19, 747–756 (2014).
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von Lucke, F., Wellmann, Z. & Diez, T. What’s at Stake in Securitising Climate Change? Towards a Differentiated Approach. Geopolitics 19, 857–884 (2014).
45.
McDonald, M. Discourses of climate security. Political Geography 33, 42–51 (2013).
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Scott, S. V. The Securitization of Climate Change in World Politics: How Close have We Come and would Full Securitization Enhance the Efficacy of Global Climate Change Policy? Review of European Community & International Environmental Law 21, 220–230 (2012).
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Barnett, J. & Adger, W. N. Climate change, human security and violent conflict. Political Geography 26, 639–655 (2007).
48.
Hsiang, S. M., Burke, M. & Miguel, E. Quantifying the Influence of Climate on Human Conflict. Science 341, 1235367–1235367 (2013).
49.
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Smith, R. & McNamara, K. E. Future migrations from Tuvalu and Kiribati: exploring government, civil society and donor perceptions. Climate and Development 7, 47–59 (2015).
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Farbotko, C. Wishful sinking: Disappearing islands, climate refugees and cosmopolitan experimentation. Asia Pacific Viewpoint 51, 47–60 (2010).
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Doyle, T. & Chaturvedi, S. Climate Refugees and Security: Conceptualizations, Categories, and Contestations. in The Oxford Handbook of Climate Change and Society.
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Ödalen, J. Underwater Self-determination: Sea-level Rise and Deterritorialized Small Island States. Ethics, Policy & Environment 17, 225–237 (2014).
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Rayfuse, R. International Law and Disappearing States. Environmental Policy and Law, 281–287.
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Magnan, A. Food Regimes. in The Oxford Handbook of Food History.
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Pritchard, B., Dixon, J., Hull, E. & Choithani, C. ‘Stepping back and moving in’: the role of the state in the contemporary food regime. The Journal of Peasant Studies 43, 693–710 (2016).
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Juma, C. The new harvest: agricultural innovation in Africa. (Oxford University Press, 2015).
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Leonardo Figueroa-Helland, Figueroa-Helland, L., Cassidy, T. & Perez Aguilera, A. Decolonizing Food Systems: Food Sovereignty, Indigenous Revitalization, and Agroecology as Counter-Hegemonic Movements. Perspectives on Global Development and Technology 17, 173–201.
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Robbins, M. J. Exploring the ‘localisation’ dimension of food sovereignty. Third World Quarterly 36, 449–468 (2015).
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McMichael, P. Commentary: Food regime for thought. The Journal of Peasant Studies 43, 648–670 (2016).
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Paddock, J. & Smith, A. M. What role for trade in food sovereignty? Insights from a small island archipelago. The Journal of Peasant Studies 45, 368–388 (2018).
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Zhang, J. Y. & Barr, M. The transformative power of commoning and alternative food networks. Environmental Politics 28, 771–789 (2019).
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Weiler, A. M., Otero, G. & Wittman, H. Rock Stars and Bad Apples: Moral Economies of Alternative Food Networks and Precarious Farm Work Regimes. Antipode 48, 1140–1162 (2016).
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Henderson, T. P. The Class Dynamics of Food Sovereignty in Mexico and Ecuador. Journal of Agrarian Change 18, 3–21 (2018).
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Kepkiewicz, L. & Dale, B. Keeping ‘our’ land: property, agriculture and tensions between Indigenous and settler visions of food sovereignty in Canada. The Journal of Peasant Studies 46, 983–1002 (2019).
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Chappell, J. Global Movements for Food Justice. in The Oxford Handbook of Food, Politics, and Society.
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Dekeyser, K., Korsten, L. & Fioramonti, L. Food sovereignty: shifting debates on democratic food governance. Food Security 10, 223–233 (2018).
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Gunningham, N. Averting Climate Catastrophe: Environmental Activism, Extinction Rebellion and Coalitions of Influence. King’s Law Journal 1–9 (2019) doi:10.1080/09615768.2019.1645424.
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Oscar Berglund. Extinction Rebellion uses tactics that toppled dictators – but we live in a liberal democracy. The Conversation.
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Rupert Read. Extinction Rebellion : I’m an academic embracing direct action to stop climate change. The Conversation.
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Alexander Hensby. Extinction Rebellion: disruption and arrests can bring social change. The Conversation.
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García-Sempere, A. et al. Urban transition toward food sovereignty. Globalizations 15, 390–406 (2018).
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Sustainable cities and communities design handbook: green engineering, architecture, and technology. (Butterworth-Heinemann, an imprint of Elsevier, 2018).
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Spano, A. & Martin, J. Complementary currencies: what role should they be playing in local and regional government? Public Money & Management 38, 139–146 (2018).
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Marshall, A. P. & O’Neill, D. W. The Bristol Pound: A Tool for Localisation? Ecological Economics 146, 273–281 (2018).
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Innovating climate governance: moving beyond experiments. (Cambridge University Press, 2018).
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McLaren, D. & Agyeman, J. Sharing cities: a case for truly smart and sustainable cities. (The MIT Press, 2015).
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Tozer, L. & Klenk, N. Urban configurations of carbon neutrality: Insights from the Carbon Neutral Cities Alliance. Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space 37, 539–557 (2019).
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Murray, R. & Newton, M. Writing retreat as structured intervention: margin or mainstream? Higher Education Research & Development 28, 541–553 (2009).