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Transboundary Cooperation and Global Governance for Inclusive Sustainable Development / Tackling the climate emergency
Transboundary Cooperation and Global Governance for Inclusive Sustainable Development / Tackling the climate emergency
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Page
1–8
Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
1–8
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11–52
Contributions in honour of Dirk Messner’s 60th anniversary
11–52
11–18
Introduction
Lilian Busse, Thomas Fues, Imme Scholz
Lilian Busse, Thomas Fues, Imme Scholz
11–18
Details
19–24
Global Governance needs to be based on, and embedded in, Good Governance
Franz Nuscheler
Franz Nuscheler
19–24
Details
How the concept of good governance came about
Details
Critical perspectives
Details
Good governance and fragile statehood
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Summary
Details
25–46
Global Governance braucht den Unter- und Überbau von Good Governance
Franz Nuscheler
Franz Nuscheler
25–46
Details
1. Struktur- und Organisationselemente von Global Governance
Details
2. Zwischenbilanz zum Stand der Governance-Forschung als Vorstufe zum Good-Governance-Diskurs
Details
3. Von Governance zu Good Governance
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3.1 Lehren der Weltbank aus der afrikanischen „crisis of governance“
Details
3.2 Die normative Profilierung von Good Governance durch die im DAC organisierte Gebergemeinschaft
Details
3.3 Die schrittweise Universalisierung eines normativen Leitbildes
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3.4 Die Vereinten Nationen als Promotoren von Good Governance
Details
3.5 Misstöne und Konkordanzen im Good-Governance-Wunschkonzert
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4. Good Governance in der internationalen und deutschen Entwicklungszusammenarbeit
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4.1 Good Governance in der deutschen Entwicklungszusammenarbeit
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5. Zusammenfassung
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6. Schlussfolgerungen ad personam
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47–52
Tipping points and small steps
Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul
Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul
47–52
Details
55–108
Science and policy for the sustainability transformation
55–108
55–60
Science and policy: Together for the great transformation
Svenja Schulze
Svenja Schulze
55–60
Details
Science and policy as drivers of the great transformation
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The German Environment Agency as a driver of transformation
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Setting off for the solar, wind and hydrogen age
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61–66
Science for the global common good
Anna-Katharina Hornidge
Anna-Katharina Hornidge
61–66
Details
Future: diverse and non-existent
Details
Knowing: foundational to governance for sustainability
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Global science: a landscape of difference
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Science for the global common good: uniting frame or accelerator of inequality?
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67–72
In between – from transdisciplinary, transformative science to evidence-based policy making
Uwe Schneidewind, Hans Haake
Uwe Schneidewind, Hans Haake
67–72
Details
The need for new forms of knowledge
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Changing faces – roles in science and beyond
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Cities as spaces for new forms of knowledge integration
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Not that far between: different tools, same mission
Details
73–80
The welfare advantage of democracy: Evidence, theory and anomalies
Jörg Faust
Jörg Faust
73–80
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1. Evidence: Democracy’s welfare advantage
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2. Theory: Explaining the democracy dividend
Details
3. Anomalies: Attractive autocracies and the globalisation paradox
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81–84
Taking action with scientific scrutiny of the bigger picture and confidence
Dirk Meyer
Dirk Meyer
81–84
Details
85–92
Fit for transformation?! – How to break out of the environmental niche and contribute to sustainability transformation: the example of the German Environment Agency (UBA)
Wolfgang Seidel, Franziska Wehinger
Wolfgang Seidel, Franziska Wehinger
85–92
Details
1) Introduction
Details
2) A transformative approach to research and policy advising
Details
3) A systemic approach to environmental protection and sustainability
Details
4) Working in networks nationally and internationally
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5) Digitalisation and sustainability
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6) Food for thought
Details
93–100
The grassroots Development development Revolution revolution is Herehere
Achim Steiner
Achim Steiner
93–100
Details
101–108
Tackling the climate emergency
Simon Maxwell
Simon Maxwell
101–108
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‘Für Mensch und Umwelt’
Details
What’s next: A (global) green new deal
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Lessons
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Conclusion
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111–182
Tackling climate and environmental change
111–182
111–118
The broken alarm clock and the problem of urgency
Andrew Norton
Andrew Norton
111–118
Details
1. The broken alarm clock
Details
2. And there is more …
Details
3. Pointers for action
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119–124
Climate justice and responsibility – rethinking climate protection and constitutional requirements
Sabine Schlacke
Sabine Schlacke
119–124
Details
Mobilising the German constitution for climate protection: The Federal Constitutional Court’s climate decision
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The European level: The European Climate Law and the ‘fit-for-55’ package of the European Commission
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The responsibility: What are the German legislator’s obligations?
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125–130
From climate economics to planetary boundaries and global commons – the next paradigm shift
Ottmar Edenhofer
Ottmar Edenhofer
125–130
Details
131–136
Reimagining cities after COVID-19 for a sustainable future
Ani Dasgupta, Manish Bapna
Ani Dasgupta, Manish Bapna
131–136
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Cities as engines of green growth
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The Role of Business
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137–142
Let’s make climate protection the business model of the century
Sabine Nallinger
Sabine Nallinger
137–142
Details
Welcome to an abundance of opportunities!
Details
The greenest solutions will be the most successful
Details
The economy can change – can politics follow?
Details
Climate protection must become the core of industrial policy
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Money will follow policy
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Climate protection needs encouragers
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What we really need: Honesty in climate targets and measures
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143–154
Humanity at crossroads of dignity and decent life for all on a stable planet
Nebojsa Nakicenovic
Nebojsa Nakicenovic
143–154
Details
155–162
Participatory approach toward an inclusive green economy: Bridging the gap between elite policy and local practices
Medelina K. Hendytio
Medelina K. Hendytio
155–162
Details
Engaging people
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Elite policy and its elitist tendency
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Policy challenges
Details
The step forward
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163–168
Culture, environment and climate change
Enrique Saravia
Enrique Saravia
163–168
Details
169–176
Budgeting nature for sustainability
Pan Jiahua
Pan Jiahua
169–176
Details
1 A life community sharing nature
Details
2. Indicators and measurements of nature budgets
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3. The rigidity of budget constraints
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4. A simple conclusion
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177–182
Implementing nature-based solutions at scale – prioritising decisions for maximising public gain
Zita Sebesvari
Zita Sebesvari
177–182
Details
Status quo
Details
Why is it challenging to determine the cost-effectiveness?
Details
Do we need to increase focus on cost-effectiveness?
Details
What should we focus on?
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185–241
Cooperation for the global common good
185–241
185–190
Universal ethics in the 21st century: Which sensibilities matter?
Siddharth Mallavarapu
Siddharth Mallavarapu
185–190
Details
191–198
Homo cooperativus: Rethinking international relations
Claus Leggewie
Claus Leggewie
191–198
Details
199–206
When cooperation meets negotiations – An approach to address the complexity of transformation to sustainability
Ariel Macaspac Hernandez
Ariel Macaspac Hernandez
199–206
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1. Introduction
Details
2. The transformation to sustainability from the negotiation perspective
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3. The types of cooperation in the transformation to sustainability based on the negotiation perspective
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Collaboration
Details
Coordination
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Deliberation
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Orchestration
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4. Conclusion – Finding lessons for transformation to sustainability
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207–214
Duisburg’s other Silk Road: revisiting international cooperation
Adolf Kloke-Lesch, Imme Scholz
Adolf Kloke-Lesch, Imme Scholz
207–214
Details
What is international cooperation and why should it change?
Details
Towards a new narrative
Details
Overcoming hindrances to universality
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Strengthening reciprocity
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Against all odds
Details
215–222
Cooperation, echo chambers and the future of global governance
J. Carlos Domínguez
J. Carlos Domínguez
215–222
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Introduction
Details
Mental sets and interdisciplinarity
Details
The threat of ‘echo chambers’
Details
The passer-by
Details
223–230
Ubuntu, a planetary contract and the thigi tree
Elizabeth Sidiropoulos
Elizabeth Sidiropoulos
223–230
Details
Ethics to steer us from the precipice
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Towards a universal social and ecological contract
Details
231–241
Metamorphosis of the technosphere. A tribute to Dirk Messner, intellectual, politician and friend
Jürgen Renn
Jürgen Renn
231–241
Details
1. Global co-operation in the Anthropocene
Details
2. Rules for the technosphere
Details
3. The technosphere as a borderline problem
Details
4. Which narratives count?
Details
5. Toward a new knowledge economy
Details
6. The technosphere as a challenging object of geoanthropology
Details
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Transboundary Cooperation and Global Governance for Inclusive Sustainable Development , page 101 - 108
Tackling the climate emergency
Autoren
Simon Maxwell
DOI
doi.org/10.5771/9783748930099-101
ISBN print: 978-3-8487-8636-7
ISBN online: 978-3-7489-3009-9
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