This book examines the influence of international public administrations on global politics in the Anthropocene. Combining theoretical and empirical methods, it is an indispensable resource for students, researchers, and practitioners in environmental policy and politics. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
This book examines the influence of international public administrations on global politics in the Anthropocene. Combining theoretical and empirical methods, it is an indispensable resource for students, researchers, and practitioners in environmental policy and politics. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
1. Introduction - Studying the role and influence of international environmental bureaucracies Helge Jörgens, Nina Kolleck and Mareike Well; 2. Means of bureaucratic influence - The interplay between formal autonomy and informal styles in international bureaucracies Michael W. Bauer, Steffen Eckhard, Jörn Ege and Christoph Knill; 3. The evolution of international environmental bureaucracies - How the climate secretariat is loosening its straitjacket Thomas Hickmann, Oscar Widerberg, Markus Lederer and Philipp Pattberg; 4. Environmental treaty secretariats as attention-seeking bureaucracies - The climate and biodiversity secretariats' role in international public policy making Mareike Well, Helge Jörgens, Barbara Saerbeck and Nina Kolleck; 5. Moving beyond mandates - The role of UNDP administrators in organizational expansion Nina Hall; 6. Follow the money - Secretariat financing as a window on the principal-agent relationship Lynn Wagner and Pamela Chasek; 7. More resources - More influence of international bureaucracies? The case of the UNFCCC secretariat's clean development mechanism regulation Katharina Michaelowa and Axel Michaelowa; 8. The Marrakech partnership for global climate action: democratic legitimacy, orchestration, and the role of international secretariats Karin Bäckstrand and Jonathan W. Kuyper; 9. The administrative embeddedness of international environmental secretariats - Towards a global administrative space? Barbara Saerbeck, Helge Jörgens, Alexandra Goritz, Johannes Schuster, Mareike Well and Nina Kolleck; 10. Reflections on the role of international public administrations in the Anthropocene Frank Biermann; Index.
1. Introduction - Studying the role and influence of international environmental bureaucracies Helge Jörgens, Nina Kolleck and Mareike Well; 2. Means of bureaucratic influence - The interplay between formal autonomy and informal styles in international bureaucracies Michael W. Bauer, Steffen Eckhard, Jörn Ege and Christoph Knill; 3. The evolution of international environmental bureaucracies - How the climate secretariat is loosening its straitjacket Thomas Hickmann, Oscar Widerberg, Markus Lederer and Philipp Pattberg; 4. Environmental treaty secretariats as attention-seeking bureaucracies - The climate and biodiversity secretariats' role in international public policy making Mareike Well, Helge Jörgens, Barbara Saerbeck and Nina Kolleck; 5. Moving beyond mandates - The role of UNDP administrators in organizational expansion Nina Hall; 6. Follow the money - Secretariat financing as a window on the principal-agent relationship Lynn Wagner and Pamela Chasek; 7. More resources - More influence of international bureaucracies? The case of the UNFCCC secretariat's clean development mechanism regulation Katharina Michaelowa and Axel Michaelowa; 8. The Marrakech partnership for global climate action: democratic legitimacy, orchestration, and the role of international secretariats Karin Bäckstrand and Jonathan W. Kuyper; 9. The administrative embeddedness of international environmental secretariats - Towards a global administrative space? Barbara Saerbeck, Helge Jörgens, Alexandra Goritz, Johannes Schuster, Mareike Well and Nina Kolleck; 10. Reflections on the role of international public administrations in the Anthropocene Frank Biermann; Index.
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