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1. Redressing environmental harm? A 'corporate sovereignty' problem

2. Most green funds do not have a sustainability impact

3. Bridging the Gap: A "Sustainable Food Seal"

4. It’s not a Sprint, it’s a Marathon: Reviewing Governmental R&D Support for Environmental Innovation

5. Tallying Updated NDCs to Gauge Emissions Reductions in 2030 and Progress toward Net Zero

6. Navigating the Crises in European Energy

7. Climate Finance Effectiveness: Six Challenging Trends

8. Building a Portfolio of Pull Financing Mechanisms for Climate and Development

9. Let Them Eat Carbon

10. From Passive Owners to Planet Savers? Asset Managers, Carbon Majors and the Limits of Sustainable Finance

11. We Will Build the Future: A Plan to Save the Planet

12. Does environmental policy uncertainty hinder investments towards a low-carbon economy?

13. Work from Home – How Good is it for the Environment?

14. The Environmental Consequences of Inequality

15. Inconsistent Definitions of GDP: Implications for Estimates of Decoupling

16. Environmental Justice and Carbon Pricing

17. The White Paper on the Future of Environmental Peacebuilding

18. To Prevent the Collapse of Biodiversity, the World Needs a New Planetary Politics

19. States Seek Treaty on Plastic Pollution

20. The impact of trade and trade policy on the environment and the climate: A review

21. Climate Policies after Paris: Pledge, Trade, and Recycle

22. Fossil Fuel Subsidy Inventories vs. Net Carbon Prices: a Consistent Approach for Measuring Fossil Fuel Price Incentives

23. Nature-based solutions to development and climate change challenges: Understanding ecosystem-based adaptation approaches

24. Assessing national laws for the implementation of CITES

25. How to rein in fossil fuel subsidies ? Towards a New WTO Regime

26. Electoral Rights of Environmentally Displaced Persons

27. COVID-19 and Conservation: Crisis Response Strategies that Benefit People and Nature

28. Strengthening Regional Policy Frameworks to Better Respond to Environmental Migration: Recommendations for the UK Government

29. Who’s Responsible for Climate Change? New Evidence Based on Country-Level Estimates of Climate Debt

30. Navigating the Straits: Pull Financing for Climate and Development Outcomes

31. Valuing Climate Liabilities: Calculating the Cost of Countries’ Historical Damage from Carbon Emissions to Inform Future Climate Finance Commitments

32. Operationalizing Climate Adaptation at the US International Development Finance Corporation: The Case for an Agriculture-Led Agenda in Low-Income Countries

33. How Do Development Agencies Support Climate Action?

34. The Impact of Environmental Regulations on Manufacturing Outsourcing: Re-examining the Pollution Haven Effect in Global Value Chain

35. Can adjustment costs in research derail the transition to green growth ?

36. Green gifts from abroad? FDI and firms' green management

37. The Need for Local Governance of Global Commons: The Example of Blue Carbon Ecosystems

38. Accounting for terrestrial and marine carbon sink enhancement

39. Framing Climate Change: The Need for a Human Security Perspective

40. Building the Banking Sector’s Capacity for Green Infrastructure Investments for a Low-Carbon Economy

41. Understanding Climate-Security Risks: A Mechanism-based Approach

42. Sorry, but the Virus Shows Why There Won’t Be Global Action on Climate Change

43. A Near-Term to Net Zero Alternative to the Social Cost of Carbon for Setting Carbon Prices

44. Net-Zero and Geospheric Return: Actions Today for 2030 and Beyond

45. Carbon Pricing in Organized Wholesale Electricity Markets

46. Nowhere to Hide: Implications for Policy, Industry, and Finance of Satellite-Based Methane Detection

47. Expanding the Reach of a Carbon Tax: Emissions Impacts of Pricing Combined with Additional Climate Actions

48. The impact economy: balancing profit and impact

49. Toward Accountable Nuclear Deterrents: How Much is Too Much?

50. Reduce, Remove, Recycle: Clarifying the Overlap between Carbon Removal and CCUS

51. A preliminary assessment of the impacts, implications, and opportunities of COVID-19 on the coastal and marine environment and resources

52. City Resiliency and Climate Change: A Report from the 2020 Inter-Policy School Summit

53. Political Economy of the Environment: A Look Back and Ahead

54. Advancing United Nations Responses to Climate-related Security Risks

55. Supply and Demand in a Time of Changing Geopolitics and a Changing Climate

56. What’s next for UN climate negotiations? The UNFCCC in the era of populism and multipolar competition

57. On the Horizon: A Collection of the Papers from the Next Generation

58. Not All that Glitters Is Gold: An Analysis of the Global Pact for the Environment Project

59. What Is a Climate Response Measure? Breaking the Trade Taboo in Confronting Climate Change

60. Designing High-seas Marine Protected Areas to Conserve Blue Carbon Ecosystems: A Climate-essential Development?

61. Governance of Marine Geoengineering

62. Global Waste Trade Chaos: Rising Environmentalism or Cost-Benefit Analysis?

63. A More Inclusive Approach to Venture Capital: Action Steps for Venture Capitalists, Ecosystem Builders, and Philanthropies

64. Digital Decarbonization

65. Soft vs Hard Governance for Labour and Environmental Commitments in Trade Agreements: Comparing the US and EU Approaches

66. The Impact of Laudato Si’ on the Paris Climate Agreement

67. Trade and Climate Change: Synergies and Conflicts

68. From Fisheries Subsidies to Energy Reform under International Trade Law

69. Veganism: An Elegant Solution to a Host of Global Problems?

70. Overcoming Obstacles in Global Climate Action from Copenhagen to Paris: Issue Framing as a Tool to Understand Opportunities for Policy Change

71. Labor Rights & Climate Change

72. Driven up the wall? Role of environmental regulation in innovation along the automotive global value chain

73. Feeding Climate Change: What the Paris Agreement means for food and beverage companies

74. Pursuing Sustainability—Connecting Science and Practice

75. Finance for Climate Resilience in the Dawn of the Paris Era

76. From Negotiation to Fulfillment: The First U.N. Climate Conferences of the Paris Era

77. Food Security and Climate Change: New Frontiers in International Security

78. Agriculture and the Paris Agreement

79. American Nuclear Diplomacy

80. American Nuclear Diplomacy

81. American Nuclear Diplomacy

82. The Paris Agreement – an important step in facing climate change challenges

83. Carbon Emissions and Economic Growth: Production-based versus Consumption-based Evidence on Decoupling

84. Enhancing Climate Change Resilience in Fragile States

85. The New Innovator’s Commercialization Dilemma

86. The End of the Beginning: Paris COP 2015

87. Central Banks Can and Should Do Their Part in Funding Sustainability

88. Elaborating in the INDC context

89. European Climate and Energy Policy: The Challenges Ahead

90. When CO2 Goes to Geneva: Taxing Carbon across Borders — Without Violating WTO Obligations

91. Global Patent Pledges: A Collaborative Mechanism for Climate Change Technology

92. Wreckage and Recovery: Exploring the Nature of Nature

93. Clean substitutes and the effectiveness of carbon footprint labels vs. Pigovian subsidies: Evidence from a field experiment

94. Models-as-Usual for Unusual Risks? On the Value of Catastrophic Climate Change

95. Globalization and Scarcity: Multilateralism for a world with limits

96. Science for Global Sustainability: Toward a New Paradigm

97. Sustainability Values, Attitudes, and Behaviors: A Review of Multi-national and Global Trends