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Subprime catalyst: Financial regulatory reform and the strengthening of US carbon market governance

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TLDR
The 2008 financial crisis has had an important, but neglected, impact on carbon market governance in the United States as discussed by the authors, and it acted as a catalyst for the emergence of a domestic coalition that drew upon the crisis experience to demand stronger regulation over carbon markets.
Abstract
The 2008 financial crisis has had an important, but neglected, impact on carbon market governance in the United States. It acted as a catalyst for the emergence of a domestic coalition that drew upon the crisis experience to demand stronger regulation over carbon markets. The influence of this coalition was seen first in the changing content of draft climate change bills between 2008 and 2010. But the coalition's more lasting legacy was its role in shaping the content of, and supporting, the passage of the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the Dodd–Frank bill) in July 2010. Although that bill was aimed primarily at bolstering financial stability, its derivatives provisions strengthened carbon market regulation in significant ways. This policy episode demonstrates new patterns of coalition building in carbon market politics as well as the growing links between climate governance and financial regulatory politics. At the same time, the significance of these developments should not be overstated because of various limitations in the content and implementation of the Dodd–Frank bill, as well as the waning support for carbon markets more generally within the US since the bill's passage.

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Protecting the Gulf: Climate change coverage in GCC print media

TL;DR: This paper explored the range and type of coverage that climate change has received over a five-year period in the English-language press in the six member countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), namely Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and United Arab Emirates.
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Climate change knowledge and organizational adaptation: a destination management organization case study

TL;DR: In this paper, an exploratory empirical study that examined the extent of organizational adaptation of a destination to climate change is presented. And the authors focus specifically on the way the destination management organization (DMO) acquires climate change knowledge and how it translates this knowledge into organizational learning and destination adaptation.
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Making market rationality: material semiotics and the case of congestion pricing in New York City

TL;DR: In this article, the authors make use of market concepts and market devices as they crafted congestion pricing plans in the context of New York City's regional governance structure, its transportation infrastructure, and its physical geography.
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Contemporary environmental entrepreneurs: from the alternative technology movement to ecologically modernised community energy

TL;DR: In this paper, the alternative technology movement was actively making its case for "softer" technologies, and today this alternative energy momentum has been most directly embraced by the contempora...
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Anthropocene challenges for youth research: understanding agency and change through complex, adaptive systems

TL;DR: The Anthropocene has come to signify human dominance over the more-than-human world with all its negative consequences for this planet's human and nonhuman inhabitants as discussed by the authors, and young people have started...
References
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Accumulation by Decarbonization and the Governance of Carbon Offsets

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the governance of international carbon offsets, analyzing the political economy of the origins and governance of offsets, and show how carbon offsets represent capital-accumulation strategies that devolve governance over the atmosphere to supranational and nonstate actors and to the market.
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Troubled futures? The global food crisis and the politics of agricultural derivatives regulation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the IPE of both food and finance and found that US domestic groups were able to boost their influence by allying with other domestic actors concerned about volatile energy prices and by linking their cause to the broader politics of financial reform in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.
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Uncertainty Markets and Carbon Markets: Variations on Polanyian Themes

TL;DR: In both cases, however, creating the abstract commodity framework necessary to make sense of the notion of "cost-effectiveness" has entailed losing touch with what was supposedly being costed, helping to engender systemic crisis as discussed by the authors.
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A Tale of Two Copenhagens: Carbon Markets and Climate Governance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that there remains a strong normative consensus about carbon markets and a deepening set of transnational governance practices, and that these governance practices only partly depend on the interstate negotiations.
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Allowance allocation in the European emissions trading system: a commentary

TL;DR: In this paper, the total allocations under the EU ETS first phase and compare these against historical emissions, projections, and national Kyoto targets, and conclude that most Phase 1 allocations are excessive on all these measures, particularly the last.