ABSTRACT

Environmental issues and questions of global change are now firmly established on the international political agenda. This book provides a wide-ranging survey of the current treatment of environmental issues in international relations.
This book begins by looking at the relevance of the different theoretical approaches current in international relations to the study of the environment. It analyzses a wide range of approaches from the debate between neo-realism and liberal institutionalism to the significant connections between gender and global environmental change. The book goes on to consider a range of key international processes, discussing the monitoring and implementation of environmental agreements, the place of ideology in negotiations and the role of international organisations.

chapter 1|23 pages

Introduction

The environment in International Relations: legacies and contentions
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chapter 2|20 pages

Environmental security as a universal value

Implications for international theory 1
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chapter 4|20 pages

IR theory

Neorealism, neoinstitutionalism and the Climate Change Convention 1
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chapter 6|22 pages

Gender and environmental change

Are women the key to safeguarding the planet?
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chapter 7|19 pages

Who cares about the environment?

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chapter 9|17 pages

Between the devil and the law of the sea

The generation of global environmental norms
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chapter 10|27 pages

The international research enterprise and global environmental change

Climate-change policy as a research process
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chapter 11|20 pages

Environmental regimes

Effectiveness and implementation review 1
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