標(biāo)題: Titlebook: Climate Innovation; Liberal Capitalism a Neil E. Harrison (Executive Director),John Mikler Book 2014 Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Mac [打印本頁(yè)] 作者: 方言 時(shí)間: 2025-3-21 19:43
書目名稱Climate Innovation影響因子(影響力)
書目名稱Climate Innovation影響因子(影響力)學(xué)科排名
書目名稱Climate Innovation網(wǎng)絡(luò)公開度
書目名稱Climate Innovation網(wǎng)絡(luò)公開度學(xué)科排名
書目名稱Climate Innovation被引頻次
書目名稱Climate Innovation被引頻次學(xué)科排名
書目名稱Climate Innovation年度引用
書目名稱Climate Innovation年度引用學(xué)科排名
書目名稱Climate Innovation讀者反饋
書目名稱Climate Innovation讀者反饋學(xué)科排名
作者: LINES 時(shí)間: 2025-3-21 21:49
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-88105-3d markets provide the conditions necessary to promote rapid and disruptive technological changes across the economy. This chapter begins from the assumption that this general fetishization of market forces impairs our ability to properly understand the American state’s role in high-tech innovation generally, and climate innovation specifically.作者: 刺穿 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 04:27 作者: Notify 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 07:31
Histological Analysis of Arthritic Jointse climate change if they could avoid regulating social activity or harming economic growth. In short, the puzzle this book has addressed is how to mitigate dangerous climate change within a capitalist economy without significantly changing the socio-economic system or retarding social welfare.作者: fringe 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 10:47 作者: 不愛防注射 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 16:08 作者: 不愛防注射 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 19:59
The Role of Corporate Scientists and Institutional Context: Corporate Responses to Climate Change incognition of the role of private actors such as corporations in international environmental regimes (Clapp, 1998; Haufler, 1998), little attention has been paid to the role of the private sector at the science- policy interface. Yet, this role can be critical in the policy making process (Ehrlich, 2006).作者: 文藝 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 00:40 作者: 擁護(hù) 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 01:31 作者: FANG 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 09:02 作者: Blasphemy 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 12:06
Colorado’s New Energy Economy: Ecological Modernization, American-Style?rought together and was shaped by sub-federal and federal forces and included and promoted a number of institutional innovations towards climate change, innovations that have been and continue to be the subject of serious political contestation both at the state and national levels.作者: Notorious 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 16:27 作者: 適宜 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 21:16 作者: Humble 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 23:55 作者: collateral 時(shí)間: 2025-3-24 05:06
978-1-137-31988-3Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited 2014作者: assent 時(shí)間: 2025-3-24 08:45
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-45793-7ion, both in the press and in the scholarly literature. However, the results of these negotiations have delivered little and global GHG emissions continue to rise. After Copenhagen, it became clear to all but the most optimistic that an effective global political agreement to mitigate climate change作者: Nonthreatening 時(shí)間: 2025-3-24 12:39 作者: 條約 時(shí)間: 2025-3-24 16:36
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-88105-3tion technology, to biotech, medical engineering, semiconductors, software, telecommunications, and defense. While this record has long been acknowledged and celebrated, attempts to understand the roots of this success have often been confounded by misguided conceptions about the institutions respon作者: pester 時(shí)間: 2025-3-24 21:46 作者: 幼兒 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 03:05 作者: Celiac-Plexus 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 05:08 作者: 鉤針織物 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 10:17 作者: 重畫只能放棄 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 15:23
J. S. S. Lanchbury,L. I. Sakkas,G. S. Panayily 20 percent of yearly global emissions (US EPA, 2013). In per capita terms, US GHG emissions rank amongst the highest of the developed countries (Garnaut, 2008: 55). It has long been clear that effective international governance for reducing GHG emissions will necessarily require significant US pa作者: 辭職 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 17:26 作者: 放大 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 23:45 作者: BAN 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 00:54 作者: 混合,攙雜 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 06:59 作者: HACK 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 10:38
2947-8561 climate change. The case is made for the need for institutional evolution to drive the climate innovation, and the potential for climate innovation in an increasingly economically interconnected world.978-1-137-31988-3978-1-137-31989-0Series ISSN 2947-8561 Series E-ISSN 2947-857X 作者: VERT 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 16:32 作者: explicit 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 20:19
Institutions that Influence Climate Innovationough technological innovation. The challenge it now faces is how to stimulate innovation of those technologies that would be most effective at reducing its GHG emissions without reducing economic growth or personal freedom. Technological innovation is generally accepted as a primary constituent of e作者: 壓迫 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 21:12
Climate Policy, Energy Technologies, and the American Developmental Statetion technology, to biotech, medical engineering, semiconductors, software, telecommunications, and defense. While this record has long been acknowledged and celebrated, attempts to understand the roots of this success have often been confounded by misguided conceptions about the institutions respon作者: Accomplish 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 01:30
Colorado’s New Energy Economy: Ecological Modernization, American-Style?most ambitious and far reaching attempts at reorganizing the economy of a state in recent times. In this chapter we argue that the NEE was an attempt at ecological modernization (EM), rather than a set of ad hoc initiatives, because it sought to fuse innovation, economic and environmental goals thro作者: 招惹 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 08:00
The Role of Corporate Scientists and Institutional Context: Corporate Responses to Climate Change in also controlling the technological and organizational resources which, if applied appropriately, could play a major role in reducing GHG emissions. The science, technology and society (STS) literature examines the interface between science and policy and suggests that scientific knowledge and socia作者: conference 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 12:58
Corporate Investment in Climate Innovationimate change mitigation depends on corporate decision-making (Newell and Paterson, 2010). What incentives would persuade firms to generate the necessary incremental and radical technologies? The answer is usually along the lines of ‘getting the prices right’ by taxing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions;作者: 大都市 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 15:50
US Labour Unions and Climate Change: Technological Innovations and Institutional Influencesety. Without their support effective climate policy will be very difficult to reach and, even more so, to implement. Yet, there remain deep differences amongst unions on climate policy ranging from opposition to strong support. That variability is to be expected given the variable position of unions作者: BRAVE 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 18:23
The Influence of US Neoliberalism on International Climate Change Policyly 20 percent of yearly global emissions (US EPA, 2013). In per capita terms, US GHG emissions rank amongst the highest of the developed countries (Garnaut, 2008: 55). It has long been clear that effective international governance for reducing GHG emissions will necessarily require significant US pa作者: PTCA635 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 23:16
Varieties of Capitalism and US versus Chinese Corporations’ Climate Change Strategies are industrializing are now its major contributors. This is why authors like Giddens (2011) have noted that casting the problem of climate change as fundamentally ‘global’ in nature abstracts from the geopolitical realities. The US and China in particular stand out for their contribution to the pro作者: 奇思怪想 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 04:35 作者: Concrete 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 09:23
Conclusion: A Way Forward human activities that have resulted in too many greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the combustion of fossil fuels. Climate change should, if possible, be mitigated. Secondly, we assume that the countries that are the major emitters of GHGs will continue to organize their political economies as som作者: 躺下殘殺 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 12:40 作者: Distribution 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 16:23
Corporate Investment in Climate Innovationre a price on carbon, or a ‘carbon tax’, was ultimately introduced in 2012 (Crowley, 2013; Christoff, 2013). In the US, a strong undercurrent of neoliberal ideology similarly frames all social, environmental, or economic challenges in terms amenable to market solutions (see also McGee’s analysis in 作者: 奇怪 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 21:26 作者: AVERT 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 23:53
The Influence of US Neoliberalism on International Climate Change Policyarly 1990s the first Bush Administration was active in negotiations to form the first overarching international agreement on climate change, the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). During these negotiations the US successfully opposed initiatives such as the inclusio作者: Cerebrovascular 時(shí)間: 2025-3-29 03:10
Varieties of Capitalism and US versus Chinese Corporations’ Climate Change Strategiesnsequences of their activities. But even if challenges in implementing environmental strategies persist, their environmental behavior has been presented more positively from strategic international business (Rugman and Verbeke, 1998a, b; Kolk and Pinkse, 2008) and integrative management-stakeholder 作者: Malcontent 時(shí)間: 2025-3-29 10:03 作者: shrill 時(shí)間: 2025-3-29 13:11
Neil E. Harrison (Executive Director),John Mikler 作者: 高度 時(shí)間: 2025-3-29 17:59
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-45793-7tion to potential economic stagnation (Mikler and Harrison, 2012). This highlights the puzzle we are concerned with here: how do institutions support or undermine the climate innovation that is necessary in liberal capitalist economies? In this chapter we build a theoretical framework that categoriz