SRI Working Papers
The SRI Working Paper is an opportunity for SRI members to publish ongoing research at an early stage. The series contains a diverse range of material, from literature reviews, case studies and policy debates to analytical and theoretical pieces. All of the topics covered relate to work under the Institute’s research groups: Business & Organisations for Sustainable Societies (BOSS), Environment & Development, Economics & Policy for Sustainability (Econopol), Social & Political Dimensions of Sustainability (SPDS), Energy & Climate Change Mitigation (ECCM) and Climate Change Adaptation, Vulnerability & Services (CCAVS). Papers which are developed further and published elsewhere may be withdrawn.
- No. 124: Quantifying the spatio-temporal evolution of energy poverty in China from 2010 to 2018 through a representative household survey. (2023) Zhang, L., Middlemiss, L. and Philips, I.
- No. 122: Challenges and opportunities for sustainable offshore wind development: Preliminary findings from a literature review and expert survey. (2020) Velenturf, A.P.M.
- No. 121: Socio-macroeconomic impacts of meeting new build and retrofit UK building energy targets to 2030: a MARCO-UK modelling study. (2020) Nieto, J., Brockway, P. and Barrett, J.
- No. 120: Report on the socio-macroeconomic impacts of the UK Labour Party's renewable and low carbon energy targets in the '30 by 2030' UK Energy Plan. (2019) Nieto, J., Brockway, P. and Barrett, J.
- No. 119 From Global to Local: Exploring the effects of the global energy policy paradigm in Zambia. (2019) Bayliss, K., Pollen, G.
- No. 118: Using Twitter data to identify networks of interest in minority policy topics. (2019) Morgan, M., Killip, G. and Diakonova, M.
- No. 117: Exploring the contribution of vertical farming to sustainable intensification from the point of view of the innovator and the farmer. (2019) Briggs, H.R., Tallontire, A.M. and Dougill, A.J.
- No. 116: Privatisation, Inequality and Poverty in the UK: Briefing prepared for UN Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights. (2018) Bayliss, K., and Mattioli, G.
- No. 115: A new north-south divide for climate knowledge? A case study of climate projections in UNFCC's national Communications Skelton, M., Porter, J.J. Dessai, S., Bresch, D.N. and Knutti, R. (2018)
- No. 114: Business 'Power of Presence:' Foreign Capital, Industry Practices and Politics of Sustainable Development in Zambia (2018) Manda, S., Tallontire, A.M. and Dougill, A.J.
- No 113: Examining the Role of User Engagement in the Regional Climate Outlook Forums: Implications for Co-production of Climate Services. (2018) Meaghan Daly & Suraje Dessai.
- See Examining the Goals of the Regional Climate Outlook Forums: What Role for User Engagement? (2018) Meaghan Daly and Suraje Dessai. https://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/abs/10.1175/WCAS-D-18-0015.1
- No 112: Building narratives to characterise uncertainty in regional climate change through expert elicitation. (2018) Suraje Dessai, Ajay Bhave, Cathryn Birch, Declan Conway, Luis Garcia-Carreras, John Paul Gosling, Neha Mittal, and David Stainforth.
- See Building narratives to characterise uncertainty in regional climate change through expert elicitation. (2018) Suraje Dessai, Ajay Bhave,Cathryn Birch, Declan Conway, Luis Garcia-Carreras, John Paul Gosling, Neha Mittal and David Stainforth. http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/aabcdd
- No 111: A physical supply-use table framework for energy analysis on the energy conversion chain. (2017) Matthew K. Heun, Anne Owen and Paul E. Brockway.
- See Heun, M.K., Owen, A., Brockway, P.E. (2018) A physical supply-use table framework for energy analysis on the energy conversion chain. Applied Energy 226, pp.1134–1162. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2018.05.109
- No 110: Identifying Opportunities for Coherence between the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions and the Sustainable Development Goals: The Case of ECOWAS Member States (2017) Philip Antwi-Agyei, Andrew J. Dougill, Thomas Peprah Agyekum, and Lindsay C. Stringer.
- No 109: Designing Industrial Strategy for a Low Carbon Transformation (2017) Jonathan Busch, Timothy Foxon and Peter Taylor.
- No 108: Climate change adaptation and cross-sectoral policy coherence in southern Africa (2017)
England, M.I., Dougill, A.J., Stringer, L.C., Vincent, K.E., Pardoe, J., Kalaba, F.K., Mkwambisi, D.D
and Namaganda, E. - No 107: Vulnerability of microfinance institutions to climate risk in the Satkhira District, Southwest Bangladesh (2017) Adrian Fenton, Anne Tallontire and Jouni Paavola.
- No. 106: Large-scale Agricultural Investments and Institutions in Zambia: Patterns, Possibilities and Barriers (2017) Manda, S., Tallontire, A.M. and Dougill, A.J.
- No. 105: Historical perspectives on pastoralism and land tenure transformation in Ngamiland, Botswana: What are the policy and institutional lessons? (2017) Basupi, L V., Quinn, C H., Dougill, A J.
- No. 104: Mini-me: Climate scientists’ (mis)perceptions of users and their needs. (2017) James J. Porter and Suraje Dessai.
- See James J. Porter and Suraje Dessai (2017) Mini-me: Why do climate scientists’ misunderstand users and their needs? (2017) Environmental Science & Policy, Vol. 77, pp.9-14. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1462901116308875
- No. 103: Developing an Input-Output based method to estimate a national-level EROI (energy return on investment) (2017) Lina Brand-Correa, Paul Brockway, Claire Carter, Tim Foxon, Anne Owen, and Peter Taylor.
- See Lina Brand-Correa, Paul Brockway, Claire Carter, Tim Foxon, Anne Owen, and Peter Taylor (2017) Developing an Input-Output based method to estimate a national-level energy return on investment (EROI). (2017) Energies 10(4), 534. DOI: 10.3390/en10040534
- No. 102: ‘I Prefer 30°’: Business Strategies for Consumer Messages to reduce carbon emissions; An Empirical Coevolutionary Analysis (2016) Elizabeth Morgan, Tim Foxon, and Anne Tallontire.
- No. 101: Comparing the social and scientific values of national climate projections in the Netherlands, Switzerland and the UK. (2016) Maurice Skelton, James J. Porter, Suraje Dessai, David N. Bresch, Reto Knutti.
- See Maurice Skelton, James J. Porter, Suraje Dessai, David N. Bresch, Reto Knutti (2017) The social and scientific values that shape national climate scenarios: a comparison of the Netherlands, Switzerland and the UK. Regional Environmental Change, December 2017, Volume 17, Issue 8, pp 2325–2338. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10113-017-1155-z
- No. 100: Can national policy blockages accelerate the development of polycentric governance? Evidence from recent developments in UK climate policy (2016) Ross Gillard, Andrew Gouldson, Jouni Paavola, and Jamie Van Alstine.
- No. 99: Autonomous adaptation to riverine flooding in Satkhira District, Bangladesh: insights for transformation (2016) Adrian Fenton, Anne Tallontire and Jouni Paavola.
- No. 98: Blowing policy bubbles: rethinking emissions targets and renewable energy subsidies in the UK (2016) Ross Gillard and Kathryn Lock.
- No. 97: Using Participatory Mapping and a Participatory Geographic Information System in pastoral land use investigation: The impacts of rangeland policy in Botswana (2016) Basupi, L V., Quinn, C H., Dougill, A J.
- No. 96: Is co-producing science for adaptation decision-making a risk worth taking? (2016) James J. Porter and Suraje Dessai.
- No. 95: A systematic review of the impacts of climate variability and change on electricity systems in Europe. (2016) Muriel C. Bonjean Stanton, Suraje Dessai, and Jouni Paavola..
- See Muriel C. Bonjean Stanton, Suraje Dessai, Jouni Paavola (2016) A systematic review of the impacts of climate variability and change on electricity systems in Europe. Energy. Volume 109, 15 August 2016, Pages 1148–1159 doi:10.1016/j.energy.2016.05.015
- No. 94: Integrating Mitigation and Adaptation in Climate and Land Use Policies in Brazil: A Policy Document Analysis (2016) Monica Di Gregorio, Leandra Fatorelli, Emilia Pramova, Peter H. May, Bruno Locatelli and Maria Brockhaus.
- No. 93: Exploring power and procedural justice within Climate-Compatible Development project design: whose priorities are being considered? (2016) Benjamin T. Wood, Andrew J. Dougill, Claire H. Quinn and Lindsay C. Stringer.
- No. 92: Spatio-temporal analyses of impacts of multiple climatic hazards in the savannah ecosystem of Ghana (2016) Gerald A.B. Yiran and Lindsay C. Stringer.
- No. 91: Barriers and enablers to the use of seasonal climate forecasts amongst organisations in Europe. (2016) Marta Bruno Soares and Suraje Dessai.
- See Marta Bruno Soares and Suraje Dessai. (2016) Barrier and enablers to the use of seasonal climate forecasts amongst organisations in Europe. Climate Change. April 2016, pp. 1-15. DOI: 10.1007/s10584-016-1671-8
- No. 90: Integrating Mitigation and Adaptation in Climate and Land Use Policies in Indonesia: A Policy Document Analysis (2015) Monica Di Gregorio, Dodik Ridho Nurrochmat, Leandra Fatorelli, Emilia Pramova, Intan Maya Sari, Bruno Locatelli and Maria Brockhaus.
- No. 89: Spatial Mapping of Vulnerability to Multi-hazards in the Savanna Ecosystem in Ghana (2015)Yiran, G.A.B., Stringer, L.C., Attua, E.M., Evans, A.J., Challinor, A.J. & Gyasi, E.A.
- No. 88: Can resilience framing enable adaptation to a changing climate? Insights from the UK water sector (2015) Paola Sakai, Suraje Dessai.
- No. 87: Governing the infrastructure commons: lessons for community energy from common pool resource management (2015) Katy Roelich, Christof Knoeri..
- No. 86: Adaptation planning and the use of climate change projections in Local Government in England and Germany. (2015) Susanne Lorenz, Suraje Dessai, Piers M. Forster, Jouni Paavola.
- See Lorenz, S., Dessai, S., Forster, P.M., Paavola, J. (2016) Adaptation planning and the use of climate change projections in local government in England and Germany. Regional Environmental Change. doi:10.1007/s10113-016-1030-3
- No. 85: Youth Participation and Agency in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (2015) Harriet Thew.
- No. 84: Which “fairness”, for whom, and why? Broadening inputs for a standard designed to certify “fairtrade carbon credits” (2015) Rebecca J. Howard, Anne M. Tallontire, Lindsay Stringer and Robert A. Marchant.
- No. 83: Adaptation to climatic hazards in the savannah ecosystem: improving adaptation policy and action (2015) Gerald A.B. Yiran and Lindsay C. Stringer.
- No. 82: Promoting biofuels in developing countries through trilateral cooperation: Brazilian perceptions of the European Union and the United States in biofuels governance (2015) Stavros Afionis and Lindsay C. Stringer.
- See Afionis, Stavros and Lindsay C. Stringer (2020). Fuelling friendships or driving divergence? Legitimacy, coherence, and negotiation in Brazilian perceptions of European and American biofuels governance, Energy Research & Social Science, 67, 101487, DOI: 10.1016/j.erss.2020.101487.
- No. 81: Tailoring the visual communication of climate projections for local adaptation practitioners in Germany and the UK. (2015) Susanne Lorenz, Suraje Dessai, Piers M. Forster, Jouni Paavola.
- See Tailoring the visual communication of climate projections for local adaptation practitioners in Germany and the UK. Philosophical Transactions A. (2015) Susanne Lorenz, Suraje Dessai, Piers M. Forster, Jouni Paavola. DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2014.0457
- No. 80: Understanding China’s past and future energy demand: an energy efficiency and decomposition analysis Paul E. Brockway, Julia K. Steinberger, John R. Barrett, Timothy J. Foxon, February 2015.
- See Brockway P.E., Steinberger J.K, Barrett J.R. & Foxon T.J. (2015) Understanding China's past and future energy demand: An exergy efficiency and decomposition analysis. Applied Energy 155, pp.892-903 DOI:10.1016/j.apenergy.2015.05.082
- No. 79: Building up resilience in agricultural supply chains: towards an integrated approach (2015)Anne Tallontire, Bob Doherty, Chee Yew Wong, William Young, Mike Tse, Severine Saintier, Zoe Ollerenshaw, Mina Said-Allsopp, Corrado Topi, David Oglethorpe.
- No. 78: Out of reach? Mitigation of CO2 emissions from road transport sector in Bahrain. (2015) M. AlSabbagh, Y. L. Siu, A. Guehnemann, J. Barrett.
- See Mitigation of CO2 emissions from the road passenger transport sector in Bahrain. (2015) M. AlSabbagh, Y. L. Siu, A. Guehnemann, J. Barrett. Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change. DOI: 10.1007/s11027-015-9666-8.
- No. 77: Renewable energy partnerships in development cooperation: Towards a relational theory of technical assistance (2015) Lena J. Kruckenberg.
- No. 76: The Right Stuff? Informing Adaptation to Climate Change in British Local Government
- See The right stuff? informing adaptation to climate change in British Local Government. (2015) James J. Porter, David Demeritt, Suraje Dessai. Global Environmental Change, 35, 411-422 doi:10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.10.004.
- No. 75: Exploring the agency of Africa in designing REDD+ and the associated implications for national level implementation (2014) Joanes Atela and Claire Quinn.
- No. 74: Unpacking Brazil’s leadership in the global biofuels arena: Brazilian ethanol diplomacy in Africa. (2014) Stavros Afionis, Lindsay C. Stringer, Nicola Favretto and Marcos Buckeridge.
- See Unpacking Brazil"s leadership in the global biofuels arena: Brazilian ethanol diplomacy in Africa. (2016) Afionis S; Stringer LC; Favretto N; Tomei J; Buckeridge MS. Global Environmental Politics, 16, pp.127-150. doi: 10.1162/GLEP_a_00369
- No. 73: Combining nexus and resilience thinking in a novel framework to enable more equitable and just outcomes. (2014) L.C.Stringer, C.H.Quinn, R.J.Berman, H.T.V.Le, F.E.Msuya, S.E. Orchard and J.C.B. Pezzuti.
- See A new framework to enable equitable outcomes: Resilience and nexus approaches combined. (2018.) L.C.Stringer, C.H.Quinn, R.J.Berman, H.T.V.Le, F.E.Msuya, S.E. Orchard and J.C.B. Pezzuti, M. Dallimer, S. Afionis, R. Berman, S.E. Orchard, M.L. Rijal. Earth's Future, 6(6), 902-918. https://doi.org/10/1029/2017EF000694
- No. 72: Assessing the key enablers for REDD+ to achieve credible mitigation and sustainable livelihood outcomes at the local level: evidence from Kenya (2014) Joanes O. Atela, Claire H. Quinn, Peter A. Minang and Lalisa Duguma.
- No. 71: What lays at stake for standards organisations pursuing fairness in the carbon market? Lessons from literature applied to practice in the carbon market (2014) Rebecca J. Howard, Anne M. Tallontire, Lindsay Stringer and Rob Marchant.
- No. 70: What do we know about UK household adaptation to climate change? A systematic review. (2014) James J. Porter, Suraje Dessai, and Emma L. Tompkins.
- See What do we know about UK household adaptation to climate change? A systematic review. (2014) James J. Porter, Suraje Dessai, and Emma L. Tompkins. Climatic Change September 2014. doi: 10.1007/s10584-014-1252-7
- No. 69: The importance of the sub-district level for community-based natural resource management in rural Zimbabwe (2014) Elizabeth P. Harrison, Lindsay C. Stringer and Andrew J. Dougill.
- No. 68: Nesting REDD+ into Integrated Conservation and Development Projects: what empirical lessons can be drawn? (2014) Joanes O. Atela, Claire H. Quinn, Peter A. Minang and Lalisa Duguma.
- No. 67: Conflicts about water in Lake Chad: are environmental, vulnerability and security issues linked? (2014) Uche T. Okpara, Lindsay C. Stringer, Andrew J. Dougill, Mohammed D. Bila.
- See Uche T. Okpara, Lindsay C. Stringer, Andrew J. Dougill, Mohammed D. Bila (2015) Conflicts about water in Lake Chad: are environmental, vulnerability and security issues linked? Progress in Development Studies 15, 4 (2015) pp. 308-325. Doi: 10.1177/1464993415592738
- No. 66: The role of livelihood assets in influencing spatial choices for REDD projects at subnational level: a case study from Kenya. (2014) Joanes O. Atela, Claire H. Quinn and Peter A. Minang.
- See Atela JO; Quinn CH; Minang PA (2014) Are REDD projects pro-poor in their spatial targeting? Evidence from Kenya, Applied Geography 52, pp.14–24.
- No. 65: The impact of climatic hazards on social network structure: insights from community support networks in Western Uganda (2014) Rachel Berman, Claire Quinn and Jouni Paavola.
- No. 64: Divergence of trends in US and UK - Aggregate Exergy Efficiencies 1960-2010. (2014) Paul Brockway, John Barrett, Timothy Foxon, Julia Steinberger.
- See Divergence of trends in US and UK aggregate exergy efficiencies 1960-2010. (2014) Brockway P.E., Barrett J.R., Foxon T.J. & Steinberger J.K. Environ. Sci. Technol. 48, pp.9874?9881. doi: 10.1021/es501217t
- No. 63: Public perception of climate risk and adaptation in the UK: a review of the literature Andrea L. Taylor, Suraje Dessai, Wändi Bruine de Bruin, June 2014.
- See Andrea L. Taylor, Suraje Dessai, Wändi Bruine de Bruin (2014) Public perception of climate risk and adaptation in the UK: a review of the literature. Climate Risk Management. DOI: 10.1016/j.crm.2014.09.001
- No. 62: On the use of seasonal to decadal climate predictions for decision-making in Europe Marta Bruno Soares and Suraje Dessai, May 2014.
- See Soares, M.B. and Dessai, S. 2015. Exploring the use of seasonal climate forecasts in Europe through expert elicitation. Climate Risk Management. July 2015. doi:10.1016/j.crm.2015.07.001 (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212096315000261)
- No. 61: The danger of mapping risk from multiple natural hazards (2014) Baoyin Liu, Yim Ling Siu, Gordon Mitchell, Wei Xu.
- See Baoyin Liu, Yim Ling Siu, Gordon Mitchell and Wei Xu (2016) The danger of mapping risk from multiple natural hazards, Natural Hazards, 01 Feb 2016, pp. 1-15. DOI: 10.1007/s11069-016-2184-5
- No. 60: The ‘double dividend’ discourse in sustainable consumption: happiness, human nature, and the reproduction of economic doctrine (2014) David Wingate Lucie Middlemiss Anna Wesselink.
- No. 59: Asset-based poverty analysis in rural Bangladesh: A comparison of principal component analysis and fuzzy set theory (2014) Sonia Ferdous Hoque..
- No. 58: Understanding the Governance of Corporations: Linking theory and practice through an examination of the factors shaping UK supermarket strategies on climate change (2014) Andy Gouldson and Rory Sullivan..
- No. 57: Talking the talk of change: REDD+ discourse in the national media (2014) Monica Di Gregorio, Maria Brockhaus, Tim Cronin.
- No. 56: Exploring mangrove social-ecological system dynamics in South-east Asia: linking livelihoods, vulnerability and ecosystem services in Vietnam. (2014) Steven Orchard, Lindsay C. Stringer and Claire Quinn.
- See Exploring mangrove social-ecological system dynamics in South-east Asia: linking livelihoods, vulnerability and ecosystem services in Vietnam. (2014) Steven Orchard, Lindsay C. Stringer and Claire Quinn http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10113-015-0802-5
- No. 55: Climate Services for Society: Origins, Institutional Arrangements, and Design Elements for an Evaluation Framework. (2014) Catherine Vaughan and Suraje Dessai.
-
- See Climate services for society: origins, institutional arrangements, and design elements for an evaluation framework. (2014) Catherine Vaughan and Suraje Dessai http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wcc.290/abstract
-
- No. 54: "How can you live like that?": energy vulnerability and the dynamic experience of fuel poverty in the UK. (2013) Lucie Middlemiss and Ross Gillard.
- See Fuel Poverty from the Bottom-Up: Characterising Household Energy Vulnerability through the Lived Experience of the Fuel Poor. (2015) Middlemiss, L. & R. Gillard. Energy Research & Social Science, 6 (0), 146-154. doi: 10.1016/j.erss.2015.02.001
- No. 53: CO2 emissions and fuel consumption of passenger vehicles in Bahrain: Current status and future scenarios. (2013) Maha AlSabbagh, Yim Ling Siu, John Barrett, Ibrahim Abdel Gelil.
- See Energy Use and CO2 Emissions of Passenger Vehicles in Bahrain - A Case Study. Maha AlSabbagh, Yim Ling Siu, John Barrett and Ibrahim Abdel Gelil. (2015) International Proceedings of Chemical, Biological and Environmental Engineering (IPCBEE), Volume 87, The 2015 International Conference on Advances in Environment Research, 95-101. DOI: 10.7763/IPCBEE. 2015. V87. 18
- No. 52: Barriers to climate change adaptation in sub-Saharan Africa: evidence from northeast Ghana & systematic literature review (2013) Philip Antwi-Agyei, Andrew J. Dougill and Lindsay C. Stringer.
- No. 51: Identifying drivers of household coping strategies to multiple climatic hazards in Western Uganda: implications for adapting to future climate change. (2013) Rachel Berman, Claire Quinn, and Jouni Paavola.
- See Rachel Berman, Claire Quinn, and Jouni Paavola. (2014) Identifying drivers of household coping strategies to multiple climatic hazards in Western Uganda: implications for adapting to future climate change. Climate and Development. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17565529.2014.902355#.U0Zr8PldXTo.
- No. 50: Experiences of host communities with carbon market projects: towards multi-level climate justice. (2013) Vivek N. Mathur, Stavros Afionis, Jouni Paavola, Andrew J. Dougill and Lindsay C. Stringer.
- See Mathur V.N., Afionis S., Paavola J., Dougill A.J. & Stringer L.C. (2014) Experiences of host communities with carbon market projects: towards multi-level climate justice, Climate Policy, 14(1), pp.42-62. doi: 10.1080/14693062.2013.861728
- No. 49: Energy, efficiency and economic growth: a coevolutionary perspective and implications for a low carbon transition (2013) Timothy J Foxon and Julia K Steinberger.
- No. 48: Regime complexes and national policy coherence: Experiences in the biodiversity cluster (2013) José Octavio Velázquez Gomar, Lindsay C. Stringer and Jouni Paavola.
- No. 47: The Governance of Corporate Responsibility Andy Gouldson, Rory Sullivan and Stavros Afionis, July 2013.
- No. 46: What role do private protected areas have in conserving global biodiversity? (2013) George Holmes.
- No. 45: Unpacking livelihood challenges and opportunities in energy crop cultivation: perspectives on Jatropha curcas projects in Mali. (2013) Nicola Favretto, L. C. Stringer and A. J. Dougill.
- See Favretto, N., Stringer, L.C., Dougill, A.J. (2014). Unpacking livelihood challenges and opportunities in energy crop cultivation: perspectives on Jatropha curcas projects in Mali. Geographical Journal, 180(4), 365-376. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/geoj.12053/pdf
- No. 44: An investigation of the evidence of benefits from climate compatible development (2013)Emma L. Tompkins, Adelina Mensah, Lesley King, Tran Kim Long, Elaine T. Lawson, Craig Hutton, Viet Anh Hoang, Chris Gordon, Marianne Fish, Jen Dyer, and Nadia Bood.
- No. 43: The communication of physical science uncertainty in European National Adaptation. (2013) Strategies. Lorenz S, S Dessai, J Paavola, P. M. Forster.
- See The communication of physical science uncertainty in European National Adaptation Strategies. (2013) Lorenz S, S Dessai, J Paavola, P. M. Forster. Climatic Change. DOI: 10.1007/s10584-013-0809-1 (Please note a slight change in the title of the journal article when compared to the SRI working paper)
- No 42: Farmer participation in the Equitable Payments for Watershed Services in Morogoro, Tanzania (2013) Emmanuel J Kwayu, Susannah M Sallu and Jouni Paavola.
- No 41: Contribution of forest provisioning ecosystem services to rural livelihoods in Copperbelt’s Miombo woodlands (2012) Zambia Felix K. Kalaba, Claire H. Quinn and Andrew J. Dougill.
- See Contribution of forest provisioning ecosystem services to rural livelihoods in the Miombo woodlands of Zambia, Population and Environment. (2013) Kalaba FK; Quinn CH; Dougill AJ pp.1-24. doi: 10.1007/s11111-013-0189-5.
- No 40: Carbon storage, biodiversity and species composition of Miombo woodlands in recovery trajectory after charcoal production and slash and burn agriculture in Zambia’s Copperbelt. (2012) Felix K. Kalaba, Claire H. Quinn, Andrew J. Dougill.
- See Floristic composition, species diversity and carbon storage in charcoal and agriculture fallows and management implications in Miombo woodlands of Zambia, Forest Ecology and Management. (2013) Kalaba FK; Quinn CH; Dougill AJ; Vinya R. 304, pp.99-109. doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2013.04.024.
- No 39: The Challenge of Resource-Led Development in Zambia’s 'New Copperbelt'.
- See The Challenge of Resource-Led Development in Zambia’s 'New Copperbelt'. (2013). Van Alstine & Afionis. Community Development Journal. DOI: 10.1093/cdj/bst019.
- No 38: High tech farming, local food systems, food aid, or strict environmental regulation? How the American Dust Bowl can teach us to deal with drought (2012) Evan D.G. Fraser.
- No 37: Characterising the nature of vulnerability to climate variability: empirical evidence from two regions of Ghana (2012) Philip Antwi-Agyei, Andrew J. Dougill, Evan D.G. Fraser, Lindsay C. Stringer.
- No 36: Understanding the limits of voluntary carbon reporting and the potential of mandatory reporting (2012) Rory Sullivan, Andy Gouldson.
- No. 35: Policy and institutional frameworks for the promotion of sustainable biofuels in Mali. (2012)Nicola Favretto, L.C. Stringer and A.J. Dougill.
- No. 34: The UN Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20): A sign of the times or 'ecology as spectacle'? (2012).
- See The UN Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20): A sign of the times or 'ecology as spectacle'? (2013) Van Alstine et al. Environmental Politics 22 (2), pp. 333-338. DOI: 10.1080/09644016.2013.765162
- No. 33: Usable science? The UK Climate Projections 2009 and Decision Support for Adaptation Planning. Samuel Tang and Suraje Dessai, June 2012.
- See Samuel Tang and Suraje Dessai (2012) Usable Science? The U.K. Climate Projections 2009 and Decision Support for Adaptation Planning, American Meteorological Society, 2012, Vol. 4, pp.300-313. http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/abs/10.1175/WCAS-D-12-00028.1
- No. 32: Spatial mapping of socio-ecological vulnerability to environmental change in Southern Africa. (2012) David J. Abson, Andrew J. Dougill and Linsay C. Stringer.
- No. 31: Skills Constraints for Low Carbon Transitions. (2012) Nicholas Jagger, Timothy J. Foxon and Andrew Gouldson.
- No. 30: How can 'Theories of the Firm' help make societies more sustainable? (2012) Rodrigo Lozano.
- See How can 'Theories of the Firm' help make societies more sustainable? (2014) Rodrigo Lozano et al., Journal of Cleaner Production. May 2014. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2014.05.007
- No. 29: The environment as a strategic priority in the European Union - Brazil partnership: is the EU behaving as a normative power or soft imperialist? (2012) Stavros Afionis and Lindsay C. Stringer.
- See The environment as a strategic priority in the European Union - Brazil partnership: is the EU behaving as a normative power or soft imperialist? (2013) Afionis & Stringer, International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics. doi: 10.1007/s10784-013-9232-3
- No.28: Cultivating clean energy in Mali: policy analysis and livelihood impacts of Jatropha curcas. (2012) Nicola Favretto, L. C. Stringer and A. J. Dougill.
- No. 27: African farmers' perceptions of erratic rainfall. (2011) Elisabeth Simelton, Claire H. Quinn, Philip Antwi-Agyei, Nnyaladzi Batisani, Andrew J. Dougill, Jen Dyer, Evan D.G. Fraser, David Mkwambisi, Staffan Rosell, Susannah Sallu and Lindsay C. Stringer.
- See Is rainfall really changing? Farmers" perceptions, meteorological data, and policy implications. (2013) Simelton E; Quinn CH; Batisani N; Dougill AJ; Dyer J; Fraser E; Mkwambisi D; Sallu SM; Stringer L. Climate and Development, 5, pp.123-138. doi: 10.1080/17565529.2012.751893.
- No. 26: EU biofuels policy: Trade protectionism or European sustainability leadership? (2011) Stavros Afionis and Lindsay C. Stringer.
- No.25: (2011) Mapping the vulnerability of crop production to drought in Ghana using rainfall, yield and socioeconomic data. Philip Antwi-Agyei, Evan D.G. Fraser, Andrew J. Dougill, Lindsay C. Stringer and Elisabeth Simelton.
- No. 24: Climate change: the ultimate 'tragedy of the commons' (2011) Jouni Pavvola.
- No. 23: Proposing a Corporate Sustainability stakeholder typology. (2010) Rodrigo Lozano.
- See Rodrigo Lozano. 2011. Addressing stakeholders and better contributing to sustainability through game theory. Journal of Corporate Citizenship. Issue 43, autumn 2011. pp45-62.
- No. 22: A coevolutionary framework for analysing a transition to a sustainable low carbon economy. (2010) Timothy J Foxon. In Press at Journal of Ecological Economics.
- No. 21: Public-Private Partnerships for Storm Risk Management in the Cayman Islands. (2010) Emma L. Tompkins and Lisa-Ann Hurlston.
- No. 20: Environment and Imperialism: Why Colonialism Still Matters. (2009) Joseph Murphy.
- No. 19: Food security, Malthus, and the "Perfect Storm": putting current debates about agricultural productivity and climate change into an historic context. (2009) Evan Fraser, Klaus Hubacek, Elisabeth Simelton, Claire Quinn and Andrew Challinor.
- No. 18: Disaster Resilience: Fear, Friends and Foreignness as Determinants of Risk Mitigating Behaviour in Small Islands. (2009) Emma L. Tompkins, Lisa-Ann Hurlston and Wouter Poortinga.
- See Tompkins, E. L, Hurlston, L-A. and Poortinga, W. (2009) Foreignness as a constraint on learning: the impact of migrants on disaster resilience in small islands, Environmental Hazards, Vol. 8, pp. 263-277.
- No. 17: Place and Exile: Imperialism, Development and Environment in Gaelic Ireland and Scotland. (2009) Joseph Murphy.
- No. 16: Evolution of Cooperative Behaviour in the Management of Mobile Ecological Resources. (2009) Julia Touza, Martin Drechsler, James C.R. Smart and Mette Termansen..
- See Touza, J. Drechsler, M. Smart, JRC, Termansen, M. (In Press) Emergence of cooperative behaviours in the management of mobile ecological resources. Environmental Modelling & Software, available online. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2012.03.015
- No. 15: Economic Crises, Land Use Vulnerabilities, Climate Variability, Food Security and Population Declines: Will History Repeat Itself or Will Our Society Adapt to Climate Change? (2009) Evan Fraser, March 2009.
- No. 14: Environmental violence and crises of legitimacy in New Caledonia. (2008) Leah Horowitz.
- See Horowitz, L.S. (2009) Environmental violence and crises of legitimacy in New Caledonia, Political Geography, Vol. 28, No. 4, pp. 248-258.
- No. 13: Governing long-term social-ecological change: What can the adaptive management and transition management approaches learn from each other? (2009) Timothy Foxon, Mark Reed and Lindsay Stringer..
- See Foxon T., Reed M. and Stringer L. (2009) Governing long-term socio-ecological change: What can resilience and transitions approaches learn from each other? Environmental Policy and Governance, Vol.19, pp. 3-20
- No. 12: Explaining Agricultural Collapse: Macro-forces, Micro-crises and the Emergence of Land Use Vulnerability in Southern Romania, Evan Fraser and Lindsay Stringer, May 2008.
- See Fraser, E and Stringer, L (2009) Explaining agricultural collapse: Macro-forces, micro-crises and the emergence of land use vulnerability in southern Romania, Global Environmental Change, Vol. 19, No. 1, pp. 45-53.
- No. 11: Interdisciplinarity, Problem Focused Research and Normativity, Anna Wesselink, May 2008.
- See Wesselink, A. (2009) The emergence of interdisciplinary knowledge in problem-focused research, Area, doi: 10.1111/j.1475-4762.2009.00882.x
- No. 10: Explaining Multi-Level Environmental Governance (2008) Jouni Paavola.
- No. 9: Sustainability-Driven Entrepreneurship: A Literature Review (2008) Bradley Parrish.
- No. 8: Stakeholder Participation for Environmental Management: A Literature Review. (2008) Mark Reed.
- See Reed, M. (2008) Stakeholder participation for environmental management: A literature review, Biological Conservation, Vol. 141, pp. 2417-2431
- No. 7 : Sustainable Consumption and Responsibility: Putting Individual Sustainability in Context (2008) Lucie Middlemiss.
- No. 6: Stakeholder Analysis and Social Network Analysis in Natural Resource Management. (2007) Christina Prell, Klaus Hubacek and Mark Reed.
- See Prell, C., Hubacek, K. and Reed, M. (2009) Stakeholder Analysis and Social Network Analysis in Natural Resource Management, Society & Natural Resources, Vol. 22, No. 6, pp. 501-508
- No. 5: Future Generations: Economic, Legal and Institutional Aspects. (2007) Klaus Hubacek and Volker Mauerhofer.
- See Hubacek, K. and Mauerhofer, V. (2007) Future generations: Economic, legal and institutional aspects, Futures, on-line: doi:10.1016/j.futures.2007.10.001
- No. 4: Urban agriculture and poverty reduction: Evaluating how food production in cities contributes to livelihood entitlements in Malawi. (2007) David Mkwambisi, Evan Fraser and Andrew Dougill..
- See Mkwambisi, D.D., Fraser, E.D.G. and Dougill, A.J. (2011). Urban agriculture and poverty reduction: evaluating how food production in cities contributes to food security, employment and income in Malawi. Journal of International Development, 23, 181-203, on-line: dx.doi.org/10.1002/JID.1657
- No. 3: Ecological Modernization and Policy Learning in Hong Kong (2007) Andrew Gouldson, Peter Hills and Richard Welford.
- See Gouldson, A.P., Hills P. and Welford R. (2008) Ecological Modernisation and Policy Learning in Hong Kong, Geoforum, Vol 39, pp.319-330, on-line: doi:10.1016/j.geoforum.2007.07.002
- No. 2: Influencing Individual Sustainability: Exploring the Role of Community-Based Organisations. (2007) Lucie Middlemiss.
- See Middlemiss, L.K. (2008) Influencing Individual Sustainability: A Review of the Evidence on the Role of Community-Based organisations, International Journal of Environment and Sustainable Development, Vol. 7, No. 2.
- No. 1: Building a Sustainable Water Framework with a Human Face. (2007) Sam Wong.
- See Wong, S. (2008) Humanising the World Bank’s Sustainable Water Framework with ‘Pro-Poor’ Principles of Governance, Social Alternatives, (Special issue on water governance), Vol. 27, No. 3, pp.15-20.