1.
Mike, Hulme. Weathered: Cultures of Climate. (SAGE Publications Ltd, 2016).
2.
Hulme, M. Why we disagree about climate change: understanding controversy, inaction and opportunity. (Cambridge University Press, 2009). doi:10.1017/CBO9780511841200.
3.
Malone, E. L. Debating climate change: pathways through argument to agreement. vol. Science in society series (Earthscan, 2009).
4.
Pielke, R. A. The honest broker: making sense of science in policy and politics. (Cambridge University Press, 2007). doi:10.1017/CBO9780511818110.
5.
Maslin, M. & Randalls, S. Future climate change. vol. Critical concepts in the environment (Routledge, 2012).
6.
Hulme, M. Exploring climate change through science and in society: an anthology of Mike Hulme’s essays, interviews and speeches. (Routledge, 2013).
7.
Mike Hulme, Noam Obermeister, Samuel Randalls, & Maud Borie. Framing the challenge of climate change in Nature and Science editorials. Nature Climate Change 8, 515–521 (2018).
8.
Benjamin K. Sovacool. Bamboo Beating Bandits: Conflict, Inequality, and Vulnerability in the Political Ecology of Climate Change Adaptation in Bangladesh. World Development 102, 183–194 (2018).
9.
O’Brien, K. Global environmental change II: From adaptation to deliberate transformation. Progress in Human Geography 36, 667–676 (2012).
10.
Yamane, A. Climate change and hazardscape of Sri Lanka. Environment and Planning A 41, 2396–2416 (2009).
11.
Aerts, J. C. J. H. Climate adaptation and flood risk in coastal cities. (Earthscan, 2012).
12.
Schipper, L. F. & Burton, I. The Earthscan reader on adaptation to climate change. (Earthscan, 2009).
13.
Emma L. Tompkins & Hallie Eakin. Managing private and public adaptation to climate change. Global Environmental Change 22, 3–11 (2012).
14.
Hilde, T. C. Uncertainty and the epistemic dimension of democratic deliberation in climate change adaptation. Democratization 19, 889–911 (2012).
15.
Keskitalo, E. C. H., Juhola, S. & Westerhoff, L. Climate change as governmentality: technologies of government for adaptation in three European countries. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 55, 435–452 (2012).
16.
Carey, M., French, A. & O’Brien, E. Unintended effects of technology on climate change adaptation: an historical analysis of water conflicts below Andean Glaciers. Journal of Historical Geography 38, 181–191 (2012).
17.
Grove, K. Preempting the next disaster: Catastrophe insurance and the financialization of disaster management. Security Dialogue 43, 139–155 (2012).
18.
Satterthwaite, D. Editorial: Why is community action needed for disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation? Environment and Urbanization 23, 339–349 (2011).
19.
Birte Frommer. Climate change and the resilient society: utopia or realistic option for German regions? Natural Hazards 58, 85–101 (2011).
20.
Cote, M. & Nightingale, A. J. Resilience thinking meets social theory: Situating social change in socio-ecological systems (SES) research. Progress in Human Geography 36, 475–489 (2011).
21.
Anbumozhi, V. Climate change in Asia and the Pacific: how can countries adapt? (Sage, 2012).
22.
Pelling, M. Adaptation to climate change: from resilience to transformation. (Routledge, 2011). doi:10.4324/9780203889046.
23.
Webber, S. Performative vulnerability: climate change adaptation policies and financing in Kiribati. Environment and Planning A 45, 2717–2733 (2013).
24.
Eriksen, S. H., Nightingale, A. J. & Eakin, H. Reframing adaptation: The political nature of climate change adaptation. Global Environmental Change 35, 523–533 (2015).
25.
Sovacool, B. K., Tan-Mullins, M., Ockwell, D. & Newell, P. Political economy, poverty, and polycentrism in the Global Environment Facility’s Least Developed Countries Fund (LDCF) for Climate Change Adaptation. Third World Quarterly 38, 1249–1271 (2017).
26.
Ahmed, N., Cheung, W. W. L., Thompson, S. & Glaser, M. Solutions to blue carbon emissions: Shrimp cultivation, mangrove deforestation and climate change in coastal Bangladesh. Marine Policy 82, 68–75 (2017).
27.
Nesshöver, C. et al. The science, policy and practice of nature-based solutions: An interdisciplinary perspective. Science of The Total Environment 579, 1215–1227 (2017).
28.
Bezner Kerr, R. et al. Knowledge politics in participatory climate change adaptation research on agroecology in Malawi. Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems 33, 238–251 (2018).
29.
Ojha, H. R. et al. Policy without politics: technocratic control of climate change adaptation policy making in Nepal. Climate Policy 16, 415–433 (2016).
30.
Paddock, J. Household consumption and environmental change: Rethinking the policy problem through narratives of food practice. Journal of Consumer Culture 17, 122–139 (2017).
31.
Wapner, P. & Willoughby, J. The Irony of Environmentalism: The Ecological Futility but Political Necessity of Lifestyle Change. Ethics & International Affairs 19, 77–89 (2012).
32.
Swaffield, J. After a decade of critique: neoliberal environmentalism, discourse analysis and the promotion of climate-protecting behaviour in the workplace. Geoforum 70, 119–129 (2016).
33.
Schlembach, R., Lear, B. & Bowman, A. Science and ethics in the post-political era: strategies within the Camp for Climate Action. Environmental Politics 21, 811–828 (2012).
34.
Connolly, J. & Prothero, A. Green Consumption: Life-politics, risk and contradictions. Journal of Consumer Culture 8, 117–145 (2008).
35.
Cupples, J. & Ridley, E. Towards a heterogeneous environmental responsibility: sustainability and cycling fundamentalism. Area 40, 254–264 (2008).
36.
Hobson, K. Reasons to Be Cheerful: Thinking Sustainably in a (Climate) Changing World. Geography Compass 2, 199–214 (2008).
37.
Murtaugh, P. A. & Schlax, M. G. Reproduction and the carbon legacies of individuals. Global Environmental Change 19, 14–20 (2009).
38.
Paterson, M. & Stripple, J. My Space: governing individuals’ carbon emissions. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 28, 341–362 (2010).
39.
Plows, A. Towards an Analysis of the ‘Success’ of UK Green Protests. British Politics 3, 92–109 (2008).
40.
Hobson, K. Bins, Bulbs, and Shower Timers: On the ‘Techno-Ethics’ of Sustainable Living. Ethics, Place & Environment 9, 317–336 (2006).
41.
Kenis, A. & Mathijs, E. Beyond individual behaviour change: the role of power, knowledge and strategy in tackling climate change. Environmental Education Research 18, 45–65 (2012).
42.
Scannell, L. & Gifford, R. Personally Relevant Climate Change: The Role of Place Attachment and Local Versus Global Message Framing in Engagement. Environment and Behavior (2011) doi:10.1177/0013916511421196.
43.
Howell, R. A. Living with a carbon allowance: The experiences of Carbon Rationing Action Groups and implications for policy. Energy Policy 41, 250–258 (2012).
44.
Jones, R., Pykett, J. & Whitehead, M. Changing behaviours: on the rise of the psychological state. (Edward Elgar, 2013).
45.
Howell, R. A. It’s not (just) "the environment, stupid!” Values, motivations, and routes to engagement of people adopting lower-carbon lifestyles. Global Environmental Change 23, 281–290 (2013).
46.
Webb, J. Climate Change and Society: The Chimera of Behaviour Change Technologies. Sociology 46, 109–125 (2012).
47.
Seabrook, J. How the lifestyle of the rich became anthropogenic activity in the climate change debate. Race & Class 57, 87–94 (2016).
48.
Shove, E. Putting practice into policy: reconfiguring questions of consumption and climate change. Contemporary Social Science 9, 415–429 (2014).
49.
Springmann, M. et al. Options for keeping the food system within environmental limits. Nature 562, 519–525 (2018).
50.
Gifford, R. D. & Chen, A. K. S. Why aren’t we taking action? Psychological barriers to climate-positive food choices. Climatic Change 140, 165–178 (2017).
51.
Isenhour, C. On conflicted Swedish consumers, the effort to stop shopping and neoliberal environmental governance. Journal of Consumer Behaviour 9, 454–469 (2010).
52.
Butler, C., Parkhill, K. A. & Pidgeon, N. F. Energy consumption and everyday life: Choice, values and agency through a practice theoretical lens. Journal of Consumer Culture 16, 887–907 (2016).
53.
Boström, M. & Klintman, M. Can we rely on ‘climate-friendly’ consumption? Journal of Consumer Culture (2017) doi:10.1177/1469540517717782.
54.
Hitchings, R., Collins, R. & Day, R. Inadvertent environmentalism and the action–value opportunity: reflections from studies at both ends of the generational spectrum. Local Environment 20, 369–385 (2015).
55.
Wang, S. Green practices are gendered: Exploring gender inequality caused by sustainable consumption policies in Taiwan. Energy Research & Social Science 18, 88–95 (2016).
56.
Ballantyne, A. G. Climate change communication: what can we learn from communication theory? Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change 7, 329–344 (2016).
57.
Jackson, S., Palmer, L., McDonald, F. & Bumpus, A. 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, 867–882 (2017).
58.
Chakrabarty, D. The Politics of Climate Change Is More Than the Politics of Capitalism. Theory, Culture & Society 34, 25–37 (2017).
59.
Nayanika Mathur. "It’s a conspiracy theory and climate change” Of beastly encounters and cervine disappearances in Himalayan India. HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory 5, 87–111 (2015).
60.
O’Neill, S. & Nicholson-Cole, S. ‘Fear Won’t Do It’: Promoting Positive Engagement With Climate Change Through Visual and Iconic Representations. Science Communication 30, 355–379 (2009).
61.
Scruggs, L. & Benegal, S. Declining public concern about climate change: Can we blame the great recession? Global Environmental Change 22, 505–515 (2012).
62.
Crate, S. A. & Nuttall, M. Anthropology and climate change: from encounters to actions. (Left Coast Press, 2009).
63.
Boykoff, M. T. & Boykoff, J. M. Balance as bias: global warming and the US prestige press. Global Environmental Change 14, 125–136 (2004).
64.
Dunaway, F. Seeing Global Warming: Contemporary Art and the Fate of the Planet. Environmental History 14, 9–31 (2009).
65.
Koteyko, N., Thelwall, M. & Nerlich, B. From Carbon Markets to Carbon Morality: Creative Compounds as Framing Devices in Online Discourses on Climate Change Mitigation. Science Communication 32, 25–54 (2009).
66.
Nerlich, B. & Koteyko, N. Compounds, creativity and complexity in climate change communication: The case of ‘carbon indulgences’. Global Environmental Change 19, 345–353 (2009).
67.
Farbotko, C. & Lazrus, H. The first climate refugees? Contesting global narratives of climate change in Tuvalu. Global Environmental Change 22, 382–390 (2012).
68.
Leyshon née Brace, C. & Geoghegan, H. Anticipatory objects and uncertain imminence: cattle grids, landscape and the presencing of climate change on the Lizard Peninsula, UK. Area 44, 237–244 (2012).
69.
Green, D. & Raygorodetsky, G. Indigenous knowledge of a changing climate. Climatic Change 100, 239–242 (2010).
70.
Boykoff, M. T. Who speaks for the climate?: making sense of media reporting on climate change. (Cambridge University Press, 2011). doi:10.1017/CBO9780511978586.
71.
Mara J Goldman, Meaghan Daly, & Eric J Lovell. Exploring multiple ontologies of drought in agro-pastoral regions of Northern Tanzania: a topological approach. Area 48, 27–33 (2016).
72.
Wibeck, V. Enhancing learning, communication and public engagement about climate change – some lessons from recent literature. Environmental Education Research 20, 387–411 (2014).
73.
Gabrys, J. & Yusoff, K. Arts, Sciences and Climate Change: Practices and Politics at the Threshold. Science as Culture 21, 1–24 (2012).
74.
Miles, M. Representing nature: art and climate change. Cultural Geographies 17, 19–35 (2010).
75.
Johns-Putra, A. Climate change in literature and literary studies: From cli-fi, climate change theater and ecopoetry to ecocriticism and climate change criticism. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change 7, 266–282 (2016).
76.
Fair, H. Three stories of Noah: Navigating religious climate change narratives in the Pacific Island region. Geo: Geography and Environment 5, (2018).
77.
Maxwell Boykoff & Beth Osnes. A Laughing matter? Confronting climate change through humor. Political Geography 154–163 (2018) doi:10.1016/j.polgeo.2018.09.006.
78.
Nisbet, M. C. Disruptive ideas: public intellectuals and their arguments for action on climate change. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change 5, 809–823 (2014).
79.
Metag, J., Füchslin, T. & Schäfer, M. S. Global warming’s five Germanys: A typology of Germans’ views on climate change and patterns of media use and information. Public Understanding of Science 26, 434–451 (2017).
80.
Atanasova, D. & Koteyko, N. Metaphors in Guardian Online and Mail Online Opinion-page Content on Climate Change: War, Religion, and Politics. Environmental Communication 11, 452–469 (2017).
81.
Jonathan Rigg & Katie Oven. Building liberal resilience? A critical review from developing rural Asia. Global Environmental Change 32, 175–186 (2015).
82.
Winkler, H., Boyd, A., Torres Gunfaus, M. & Raubenheimer, S. Reconsidering development by reflecting on climate change. International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 15, 369–385 (2015).
83.
Grist, N. Positioning climate change in sustainable development discourse. Journal of International Development 20, 783–803 (2008).
84.
Newell, P., Phillips, J. & Purohit, P. The Political Economy of Clean Development in India: CDM and Beyond. IDS Bulletin 42, 89–96 (2011).
85.
MATTHEW, R. A. & HAMMILL, A. Sustainable development and climate change. International Affairs 85, 1117–1128 (2009).
86.
Michael Watts, Paul Robbins, & Richard Peet. Global political ecology. (Routledge, 2011). doi:10.4324/9780203842249.
87.
Fujikura, R. & Kawanishi, M. Climate change adaptation and international development: making development cooperation more effective. (Earthscan, 2011).
88.
David M. Lansing. Realizing Carbon’s Value: Discourse and Calculation in the Production of Carbon Forestry Offsets in Costa Rica. Antipode 43, 731–753 (2011).
89.
Adam G. Bumpus. The Matter of Carbon: Understanding the Materiality of tCO2e in Carbon Offsets. Antipode 43, 612–638 (2011).
90.
Adam G. Bumpus & Diana M. Liverman. Accumulation by Decarbonization and the Governance of Carbon Offsets. Economic Geography 84, 127–155 (2009).
91.
Karen Holm Olsen. The clean development mechanism’s contribution to sustainable development: a review of the literature. Climatic Change 84, 59–73 (2007).
92.
Emily Boyd, Natasha Grist, Sirkku Juhola, & Valerie Nelson. Exploring Development Futures in a Changing Climate: Frontiers for Development Policy and Practice. Development Policy Review 27, 659–674 (2009).
93.
Esteve Corbera & Heike Schroeder. Governing and implementing REDD+. Environmental Science & Policy 14, 89–99 (2011).
94.
Haruna Gujba, Steve Thorne, Yacob Mulugetta, Kavita Rai, & Youba Sokona. Financing low carbon energy access in Africa. Energy Policy 47, 71–78 (2012).
95.
Van den Berg, R. D. & Feinstein, O. N. Evaluating climate change and development. vol. World Bank series on development (Transaction, 2009).
96.
Fujikura, R. & Kawanishi, M. Climate change adaptation and international development: making development cooperation more effective. (Earthscan, 2011).
97.
Christopher M. Dent. East Asia’s new developmentalism: state capacity, climate change and low-carbon development. Third World Quarterly 39, 1–20 (2017).
98.
Pablo S Bose. Vulnerabilities and displacements: adaptation and mitigation to climate change as a new development mantra. Area 48, 168–175 (2016).
99.
Kate Manzo & Rory Padfield. Palm oil not polar bears: climate change and development in Malaysian media. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 41, 460–476 (2016).
100.
Yiting Wang & Catherine Corson. The making of a ‘charismatic’ carbon credit: clean cookstoves and ‘uncooperative’ women in western Kenya. Environment and Planning A 47, 2064–2079 (2015).
101.
Vladimir Janković & Andrew Bowman. After the green gold rush: the construction of climate change as a market transition. Economy and Society 43, 233–259 (2014).
102.
Christopher Wright & Daniel Nyberg. Creative self-destruction: corporate responses to climate change as political myths. Environmental Politics 23, 205–223 (2014).
103.
Donald MacKenzie. Making things the same: Gases, emission rights and the politics of carbon markets. Accounting, Organizations and Society 34, 440–455 (2009).
104.
Servaas Storm. Capitalism and Climate Change: Can the Invisible Hand Adjust the Natural Thermostat? Development and Change 40, 1011–1038 (2009).
105.
Ian Bailey, Andy Gouldson, & Peter Newell. Ecological Modernisation and the Governance of Carbon: A Critical Analysis. Antipode 43, 682–703 (2011).
106.
Ian Bailey, Iain MacGill, Rob Passey, & Hugh Compston. The fall (and rise) of carbon pricing in Australia: a political strategy analysis of the carbon pollution reduction scheme. Environmental Politics 21, 691–711 (2012).
107.
Benjamin Stephan. Bringing discourse to the market: the commodification of avoided deforestation. Environmental Politics 21, 621–639 (2012).
108.
Heather Lovell. Climate change, markets and standards: the case of financial accounting. Economy and Society 43, 260–284 (2014).
109.
Funk, M. Windfall: the booming business of global warming. (Penguin Press, 2014).
110.
Heather Lovell & Donald MacKenzie. Accounting for Carbon: The Role of Accounting Professional Organisations in Governing Climate Change. Antipode 43, 704–730 (2011).
111.
Kristin Asdal. From climate issue to oil issue: offices of public administration, versions of economics, and the ordinary technologies of politics. Environment and Planning A 46, 2110–2124 (2014).
112.
Daniel Nyberg & Christopher Wright. Justifying business responses to climate change: discursive strategies of similarity and difference. Environment and Planning A 44, 1819–1835 (2012).
113.
Sarah Bracking. The Anti-Politics of Climate Finance: The Creation and Performativity of the Green Climate Fund. Antipode 47, 281–302 (2015).
114.
Frank Venmans. A literature-based multi-criteria evaluation of the EU ETS. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 16, 5493–5510 (2012).
115.
Samuel Randalls. Optimal Climate Change: Economics and Climate Science Policy Histories (from Heuristic to Normative). Osiris 26, 224–242 (2011).
116.
Okereke, C. & Coventry, P. Climate justice and the international regime: before, during, and after Paris. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change 7, 834–851 (2016).
117.
Pranay Sanklecha. Should there be future people? A fundamental question for climate change and intergenerational justice. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change 8, e453–e453 (2017).
118.
Menno Kamminga. The ethics of climate politics: four modes of moral discourse. Environmental Politics 17, 673–692 (2008).
119.
McKinnon, C. Climate change and future justice: precaution, compensation, and triage. vol. Routledge issues in contemporary political theory (Routledge, 2012).
120.
Arnold, D. G. The ethics of global climate change. (Cambridge University Press, 2011). doi:10.1017/CBO9780511732294.
121.
Gardiner, S. M. A perfect moral storm: the ethical tragedy of climate change. vol. Environmental ethics and science policy series (Oxford University Press, 2011).
122.
Skrimshire, S. Future ethics: climate change and apocalyptic imagination. (Continuum, 2010).
123.
Gardiner, S. M. Climate ethics: essential readings. (Oxford University Press, 2010).
124.
Northcott, M. S. A moral climate: the ethics of global warming. (in association with Christian Aid, 2007).
125.
Roberts, J. T. & Parks, B. C. A climate of injustice: global inequality, North-South politics, and climate policy. vol. Global environmental accord (MIT Press, 2007).
126.
B. C. Parks & J. T. Roberts. Climate Change, Social Theory and Justice. Theory, Culture & Society 27, 134–166 (2010).
127.
Marco Grasso. A normative ethical framework in climate change. Climatic Change 81, 223–246 (2007).
128.
Bradley C Parks & J Timmons Roberts. Inequality and the global climate regime: breaking the north-south impasse. Cambridge Review of International Affairs 21, 621–648 (2008).
129.
S. Barrett. The necessity of a multiscalar analysis of climate justice. Progress in Human Geography 37, 215–233 (2013).
130.
Susannah Fisher. The emerging geographies of climate justice. The Geographical Journal 181, 73–82 (2015).
131.
David Schlosberg & Lisette B. Collins. From environmental to climate justice: climate change and the discourse of environmental justice. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change 5, 359–374 (2014).
132.
Harris, P. G. Ethics, environmental justice and climate change. (Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc). doi:10.4337/9781785367601.
133.
Climate Change and Individual Duties to Reduce GHG Emissions.
134.
Andreas Béguin et al. The opposing effects of climate change and socio-economic development on the global distribution of malaria. Global Environmental Change 21, 1209–1214 (2011).
135.
Jonathan A. Patz, Holly K. Gibbs, Jonathan A. Foley, Jamesine V. Rogers, & Kirk R. Smith. Climate Change and Global Health: Quantifying a Growing Ethical Crisis. EcoHealth 4, 397–405 (2007).
136.
J. Stephenson, K. Newman, & S. Mayhew. Population dynamics and climate change: what are the links? Journal of Public Health 32, 150–156 (2010).
137.
Anthony Costello, Mark Maslin, Hugh Montgomery, Anne Johnson, & Paul Ekins. Global health and climate change: moving from denial and catastrophic fatalism to positive action. Phil. Trans. Roy Soc A 369, 1866–1882 (2011).
138.
Sharon Friel et al. Public health benefits of strategies to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions: food and agriculture. The Lancet 374, 2016–2025 (2009).
139.
Anthony G. Capon & Elizabeth G. Hanna. Climate change: an emerging health issue. New South Wales Public Health Bulletin 20, (2009).
140.
Anthony Costello et al. Managing the health effects of climate change: Lancet and University College London Institute for Global Health Commission. The Lancet 373, 1693–1733 (2009).
141.
Kathryn J Bowen & Sharon Friel. Climate change adaptation: Where does global health fit in the agenda? Globalization and Health 8, 10–10 (2012).
142.
James Milner, Michael Davies, & Paul Wilkinson. Urban energy, carbon management (low carbon cities) and co-benefits for human health. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 4, 398–404 (2012).
143.
S. E. Curtis & K. J. Oven. Geographies of health and climate change. Progress in Human Geography 36, 654–666 (2011).
144.
A. Haines. Health benefits of a low carbon economy. Public Health 126, S33–S39 (2012).
145.
M. Pascal, A.C. Viso, S. Medina, M.C. Delmas, & P. Beaudeau. How can a climate change perspective be integrated into public health surveillance? Public Health 126, 660–667 (2012).
146.
Margherita Grasso, Matteo Manera, Aline Chiabai, & Anil Markandya. The Health Effects of Climate Change: A Survey of Recent Quantitative Research. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 9, 1523–1547 (2012).
147.
Anthony, McMichael, H. Montgomery, & A. Costello. Health risks, present and future, from global climate change. BMJ 344, e1359–e1359 (2012).
148.
Andrew Papworth, Mark Maslin, & Samuel Randalls. Is climate change the greatest threat to global health? The Geographical Journal 181, 413–422 (2015).
149.
Nick Watts et al. Health and climate change: policy responses to protect public health. The Lancet 386, 1861–1914 (2015).
150.
David Ciplet & J. Timmons Roberts. Climate change and the transition to neoliberal environmental governance. Global Environmental Change 46, 148–156 (2017).
151.
Tim Kurz, Martha Augoustinos, & Shona Crabb. Contesting the ‘national interest’ and maintaining ‘our lifestyle’: A discursive analysis of political rhetoric around climate change. British Journal of Social Psychology 49, 601–625 (2010).
152.
Bulkeley, H. & Newell, P. Governing climate change. vol. Global institutions series (Routledge, 2010).
153.
Rootes, C., Zito, A. & Barry, J. Climate change, national politics and grassroots action: an introduction. Environmental Politics 21, 677–690 (2012).
154.
Harriet Bulkeley. Governance and the geography of authority: modalities of authorisation and the transnational governing of climate change. Environment and Planning A 44, 2428–2444 (2012).
155.
Swyngedouw, E. Apocalypse Forever?: Post-political Populism and the Spectre of Climate Change. Theory, Culture & Society 27, 213–232 (2010).
156.
Peter, Christoff. Post-Kyoto? Post-Bush? Towards an effective ‘climate coalition of the willing’. International Affairs 82, 831–860 (2006).
157.
Aaron M. McCright & Riley E. Dunlap. The Politicization of Climate Change and Polarization in the American Public’s Views of Global Warming, 2001–2010. Sociological Quarterly 52, 155–194 (2011).
158.
Ted Rutland & Alex Aylett. The work of policy: actor networks, governmentality, and local action on climate change in Portland, Oregon. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 26, 627–646 (2008).
159.
Peter North. The politics of climate activism in the UK: a social movement analysis. Environment and Planning A 43, 1581–1598 (2011).
160.
D. Rothe. Managing Climate Risks or Risking a Managerial Climate: State, Security and Governance in the International Climate Regime. International Relations 25, 330–345 (2011).
161.
Joel Wainwright & Geoff Mann. Climate Leviathan. Antipode 45, 1–22 (2013).
162.
Carl Death. Summit theatre: exemplary governmentality and environmental diplomacy in Johannesburg and Copenhagen. Environmental Politics 20, 1–19 (2011).
163.
Hoffmann, M. J. Climate governance at the crossroads: experimenting with a global response after Kyoto. (Oxford University Press, 2011). doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195390087.001.0001.
164.
J. Sterman et al. World Climate: A Role-Play Simulation of Climate Negotiations. Simulation & Gaming 46, 348–382 (2015).
165.
Charles Thorpe & Brynna Jacobson. Life politics, nature and the state: Giddens’ sociological theory and The Politics of Climate Change. The British Journal of Sociology 64, 99–122 (2013).
166.
Anneleen Kenis & Matthias Lievens. Imagining the carbon neutral city: The (post)politics of time and space. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 49, 1762–1778 (2017).
167.
Amanda M. Rosen. The Wrong Solution at the Right Time: The Failure of the Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change. Politics & Policy 43, 30–58 (2015).
168.
Simon Dalby. Climate geopolitics: Securing the global economy. International Politics 52, 426–444 (2015).
169.
Oli, Brown, Anne, Hammill, & Robert, McLeman. Climate change as the ‘new’ security threat: implications for Africa. International Affairs 83, 1141–1154 (2007).
170.
Gregory, White. Climate change and migration: security and borders in a warming world. (Oxford University Press, 2011).
171.
Richard Anthony Matthew. Global environmental change and human security. (MIT Press, 2010).
172.
Dyer, G. Climate wars: the fight for survival as the world overheats. (Oneworld, 2010).
173.
Dalby, S. Security and environmental change. (Polity, 2009).
174.
Jon Barnett & W. Neil Adger. Climate change, human security and violent conflict. Political Geography 26, 639–655 (2007).
175.
John Podesta & Peter Ogden. The Security Implications of Climate Change. The Washington Quarterly 31, 115–138 (2008).
176.
Marieke de Goede & Samuel Randalls. Precaution, preemption: arts and technologies of the actionable future. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 27, 859–878 (2009).
177.
Maximilian Mayer. Chaotic Climate Change and Security. International Political Sociology 6, 165–185 (2012).
178.
C. Methmann & D. Rothe. Politics for the day after tomorrow: The logic of apocalypse in global climate politics. Security Dialogue 43, 323–344 (2012).
179.
Nick Gill. ‘Environmental Refugees’: Key Debates and the Contributions of Geographers. Geography Compass 4, 861–871 (2010).
180.
E. Gartzke. Could climate change precipitate peace? Journal of Peace Research 49, 177–192 (2012).
181.
Alexander Dunlap & James Fairhead. The Militarisation and Marketisation of Nature: An Alternative Lens to ‘Climate-Conflict’. Geopolitics 19, 937–961 (2014).
182.
Chris Methmann. Visualizing Climate-Refugees: Race, Vulnerability, and Resilience in Global Liberal Politics. International Political Sociology 8, 416–435 (2014).
183.
Andrew Telford. A threat to climate-secure European futures? Exploring racial logics and climate-induced migration in US and EU climate security discourses. Geoforum 96, 268–277 (2018).
184.
Myanna Lahsen. A science–policy interface in the global south: the politics of carbon sinks and science in Brazil. Climatic Change 97, 339–372 (2009).
185.
Edwards, P. N. A vast machine: computer models, climate data, and the politics of global warming. (MIT Press, 2010).
186.
S. Jasanoff. A New Climate for Society. Theory, Culture & Society 27, 233–253 (2010).
187.
Myanna Lahsen. Experiences of modernity in the greenhouse: A cultural analysis of a physicist "trio” supporting the backlash against global warming. Global Environmental Change 18, 204–219 (2008).
188.
David Demeritt. The Construction of Global Warming and the Politics of Science. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 91, 307–337 (2001).
189.
Maxwell T. Boykoff, David Frame, & Samuel Randalls. Discursive stability meets climate instability: A critical exploration of the concept of ‘climate stabilization’ in contemporary climate policy. Global Environmental Change 20, 53–64 (2010).
190.
Mark Charlesworth & Chukwumerije Okereke. Policy responses to rapid climate change: An epistemological critique of dominant approaches. Global Environmental Change 20, 121–129 (2010).
191.
Malte Meinshausen et al. Greenhouse-gas emission targets for limiting global warming to 2 °C. Nature 458, 1158–1162 (2009).
192.
M. Hulme & M. Mahony. Climate change: What do we know about the IPCC? Progress in Physical Geography 34, 705–718 (2010).
193.
Joeri Rogelj et al. Emission pathways consistent with a 2 °C global temperature limit. Nature Climate Change 1, 413–418 (2011).
194.
A. J. Hoffman. Talking Past Each Other? Cultural Framing of Skeptical and Convinced Logics in the Climate Change Debate. Organization & Environment 24, 3–33 (2011).
195.
Richard Heede. Tracing anthropogenic carbon dioxide and methane emissions to fossil fuel and cement producers, 1854–2010. Climatic Change 122, 229–241 (2014).
196.
Heede, R. & Oreskes, N. Potential emissions of CO2 and methane from proved reserves of fossil fuels: An alternative analysis. Global Environmental Change 36, 12–20 (2016).
197.
Chris Caseldine. So what sort of climate do we want? Thoughts on how to decide what is ‘natural’ climate. The Geographical Journal 181, 366–374 (2015).
198.
David G. Victor & Charles F. Kennel. Climate policy: Ditch the 2 °C warming goal. Nature 514, 30–31 (2014).
199.
Marianne Ryghaug & Tomas Moe Skjølsvold. The Global Warming of Climate Science: Climategate and the Construction of Scientific Facts. International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 24, 287–307 (2010).
200.
Adriana Bailey, Lorine Giangola, & Maxwell T. Boykoff. How Grammatical Choice Shapes Media Representations of Climate (Un)certainty. Environmental Communication 8, 197–215 (2014).
201.
Andrew Jordan et al. Going beyond two degrees? The risks and opportunities of alternative options. Climate Policy 13, 751–769 (2013).
202.
Morseletto, P., Biermann, F. & Pattberg, P. Governing by targets: reductio ad unum and evolution of the two-degree climate target. International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics (2016) doi:10.1007/s10784-016-9336-7.
203.
Dan M. Kahan, Asheley Landrum, Katie Carpenter, Laura Helft, & Kathleen Hall Jamieson. Science Curiosity and Political Information Processing. Political Psychology 38, 179–199 (2017).
204.
Sophie Webber. Circulating climate services: Commercializing science for climate change adaptation in Pacific Islands. Geoforum 85, 82–91 (2017).
205.
Marta Bruno Soares, Meghan Alexander, & Suraje Dessai. Sectoral use of climate information in Europe: A synoptic overview. Climate Services 9, 5–20 (2018).
206.
James J. Porter & Suraje Dessai. Mini-me: Why do climate scientists’ misunderstand users and their needs? Environmental Science & Policy 77, 9–14 (2017).
207.
B. Hale & L. Dilling. Geoengineering, Ocean Fertilization, and the Problem of Permissible Pollution. Science, Technology & Human Values 36, 190–212 (2010).
208.
Launder, B. E. & Thompson, J. M. T. Geo-engineering climate change: environmental necessity or Pandora’s box? (Cambridge University Press, 2010).
209.
Federico Caprotti. The cultural economy of cleantech: environmental discourse and the emergence of a new technology sector. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 37, 370–385 (2012).
210.
Szarka, J. Climate Challenges, Ecological Modernization, and Technological Forcing. (2012).
211.
S. Pacala. Stabilization Wedges: Solving the Climate Problem for the Next 50 Years with Current Technologies. Science 305, 968–972 (2004).
212.
Veronika Dornburg et al. Bioenergy revisited: Key factors in global potentials of bioenergy. Energy & Environmental Science 3, 258–267 (2010).
213.
A. Sentance. Developing transport infrastructure for the Low Carbon Society. Oxford Review of Economic Policy 25, 391–410 (2009).
214.
Karin Bäckstrand, James Meadowcroft, & Michael Oppenheimer. The politics and policy of carbon capture and storage: Framing an emergent technology. Global Environmental Change 21, 275–281 (2011).
215.
K. Bickerstaff, I. Lorenzoni, N.F. Pidgeon, W. Poortinga, & P. Simmons. Reframing nuclear power in the UK energy debate: nuclear power, climate change mitigation and radioactive waste. Public Understanding of Science 17, 145–169 (2008).
216.
Les Levidow. EU criteria for sustainable biofuels: Accounting for carbon, depoliticising plunder. Geoforum 44, 211–223 (2012).
217.
Jennie C. Stephens, Anders Hansson, Yue Liu, Heleen de Coninck, & Shalini Vajjhala. Characterizing the international carbon capture and storage community. Global Environmental Change 21, 379–390 (2011).
218.
Cédric Clastres. Smart grids: Another step towards competition, energy security and climate change objectives. Energy Policy 39, 5399–5408 (2011).
219.
Bronislaw Szerszynski, Matthew Kearnes, Phil Macnaghten, Richard Owen, & Jack Stilgoe. Why solar radiation management geoengineering and democracy won’t mix. Environment and Planning A 45, 2809–2816 (2013).
220.
J. B. Horton. The emergency framing of solar geoengineering: Time for a different approach. The Anthropocene Review 2, 147–151 (2015).
221.
J. Reynolds. A critical examination of the climate engineering moral hazard and risk compensation concern. The Anthropocene Review 2, 174–191 (2015).
222.
Mark Winskel et al. Learning pathways for energy supply technologies: Bridging between innovation studies and learning rates. Technological Forecasting and Social Change 81, 96–114 (2014).
223.
Kate Elizabeth Gannon & Mike Hulme. Geoengineering at the "Edge of the World”: Exploring perceptions of ocean fertilisation through the Haida Salmon Restoration Corporation. Geo: Geography and Environment 5, (2018).
224.
Behringer, W. A cultural history of climate. (Polity, 2010).
225.
Fleming, J. R. Historical perspectives on climate change. (Oxford University Press, 1998). doi:10.1093/oso/9780195078701.001.0001.
226.
Weart, Spencer R. The discovery of global warming. vol. New histories of science, technology, and medicine (Harvard University Press, 2008).
227.
Diana M. Liverman. Conventions of climate change: constructions of danger and the dispossession of the atmosphere. Journal of Historical Geography 35, 279–296 (2009).
228.
Michael Oppenheimer & Annie Petsonk. Article 2 of the UNFCCC: Historical Origins, Recent Interpretations. Climatic Change 73, 195–226 (2005).
229.
Hans Von Storch & Nico Stehr. Anthropogenic Climate Change: A Reason for Concern Since the 18th Century and Earlier. Geografiska Annaler, Series A: Physical Geography 88, 107–113 (2006).
230.
James Rodger Fleming and Vladimir Jankovic. Osiris. Vol. 26, (2011).
231.
Parker, G. Global crisis: war, climate change and catastrophe in the seventeenth century. (Yale University Press, 2013).
232.
Hamblin, J. D. Arming mother nature: the birth of catastrophic environmentalism. (Oxford University Press, 2013).
233.
Fleming, J. R. & Johnson, A. Toxic airs: body, place, planet in historical perspective. (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2014). doi:10.2307/j.ctt5vkgsj.
234.
Jonathan D. Oldfield. Imagining climates past, present and future: Soviet contributions to the science of anthropogenic climate change, 1953–1991. Journal of Historical Geography 60, 41–51 (2018).
235.
The Corner House. http://www.thecornerhouse.org.uk/.
236.
Lovell, H. Framing sustainable housing as a solution to climate change. Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning 6, 35–55 (2004).
237.
Urry, John. Climate change and society. (Polity, 2011).
238.
Stevenson, H. & Dryzek, J. S. The discursive democratisation of global climate governance. Environmental Politics 21, 189–210 (2012).
239.
Demeritt, D. Science studies, climate change and the prospects for constructivist critique. Economy and Society 35, 453–479 (2006).
240.
Hulme, M. Claiming and Adjudicating on Mt Kilimanjaro’s Shrinking Glaciers: Guy Callendar, Al Gore and Extended Peer Communities. Science as Culture 19, 303–326 (2010).
241.
Scrase, J. I. & Ockwell, D. G. The role of discourse and linguistic framing effects in sustaining high carbon energy policy—An accessible introduction. Energy Policy 38, 2225–2233 (2010).
242.
Vanesa Castán Broto & Harriet Bulkeley. A survey of urban climate change experiments in 100 cities. Global Environmental Change 23, 92–102 (2013).
243.
Nicholson, C. T. M. Climate change and the politics of causal reasoning: the case of climate change and migration. The Geographical Journal 180, 151–160 (2014).
244.
Dr Heather Lovell - Climate change and its challenge for policy makers. (5AD).
245.
Dr Richard Milne - Critical Thinking on Climate Change: separating skepticism from denial. (24AD).
246.
Prof Alexander Tudhope - Tropical Climate Change and Variability. (28AD).
247.
The DESERTEC Vision. (6AD).
248.
Noam Chomsky: How Climate Change Became a ‘Liberal Hoax’. (24AD).
249.
Bill McKibben: Why Climate Change Is the Most Urgent Challenge We Face. (24AD).
250.
Max Boykoff Discusses the Media and Global Warming. (1AD).
251.
Harriet Bulkeley & Vanesa Castán Broto. Government by experiment? Global cities and the governing of climate change. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 38, 361–375 (2013).
252.
Castán Broto, V. Urban Governance and the Politics of Climate change. World Development 93, 1–15 (2017).
253.
Jordan, A. J. et al. Emergence of polycentric climate governance and its future prospects. Nature Climate Change 5, 977–982 (2015).
254.
Anthony McLean, Harriet Bulkeley, & Mike Crang. Negotiating the urban smart grid: Socio-technical experimentation in the city of Austin. Urban Studies 53, 3246–3263 (2016).
255.
Rocle, N. & Salles, D. "Pioneers but not guinea pigs”: experimenting with climate change adaptation in French coastal areas. Policy Sciences 51, 231–247 (2018).
256.
Kenneth W. Abbott. Orchestrating experimentation in non-state environmental commitments. Environmental Politics 26, 738–763 (2017).
257.
Lotte Asveld. The Need for Governance by Experimentation: The Case of Biofuels. Science and Engineering Ethics 22, 815–830 (2016).
258.
Gareth A S Edwards & Harriet Bulkeley. Heterotopia and the urban politics of climate change experimentation. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 36, 350–369 (2018).
259.
Dorsch, M. J. & Flachsland, C. A Polycentric Approach to Global Climate Governance. Global Environmental Politics 17, 45–64 (2017).
260.
Rodrigo Antonio Arriagada et al. Climate change governance in the Anthropocene: Emergence of Polycentrism in Chile. Elem Sci Anth 6, 68–68 (2018).