32-1 ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
Bosomworth, Karyn. 2015. Climate change adaptation in public policy: Frames, fire management, and frame reflection. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 6: 1450-66.
Buizer, Marleen, Bas Arts, and Judith Westerink. 2016. Landscape governance as policy integration ‘from below’: A case of displaced and contained political conflict in the Netherlands. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 3: 448-62.
Buzogány, Aron. 2015. Building governance on fragile grounds: Lessons from Romania. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 5: 901-18.
Cidell, Julie. 2015. Performing leadership: Municipal green building policies and the city as role model. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 3: 566-79.
Dang, Thi Kim Phung, Ingrid J. Visseren-Hamakers, and Bas Arts. 2016. A framework for assessing governance capacity: An illustration from Vietnam’s forestry reforms. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 6: 1154-74.
de Jong, Wil, and Pablo Pacheco. 2016. Integrating multiple environmental regimes: Land and forest policies under broader democratic reforms in the Bolivian tropical lowlands. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 3: 463-77.
Dilley, Luke T M. 2015. Governing our choices: ‘Proenvironmental behaviour’ as a practice of government. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 2: 272-99.
Dressler, Wolfram H., Sango Mahanty, Jessica Clendenning, and Phuc Xuan To. 2015. Rearticulating governance through carbon in the Lao PDR?. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 5: 1265-83.
Fagan, Adam, and Indraneel Sircar. 2015. Europeanisation and multi-level environmental governance in a post-conflict context: The gradual development of environmental impact assessment processes in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 5: 919-34.
Gordon, David J. 2016. Lament for a network? Cities and networked climate governance in Canada. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 3: 529-45.
Ison, Ray, Catherine Allan, and Kevin Collins. 2015. Reframing water governance praxis: Does reflection on metaphors have a role? Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 6: 1697-1713.
Lee, Taedong, and Chris Koski. 2015. Multilevel governance and urban climate change mitigation. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 6: 1501-17.
Matthews, Tony. 2015. Storylines of institutional responses to climate change as a transformative stressor: The case of regional planning in South East Queensland, Australia. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 5: 1092-1107.
Niemeier, Deb, Ryken Grattet, and Thomas Beamish. 2015. “Blueprinting” and climate change: Regional governance and civic participation in land use and transportation planning. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 6: 1600-17.
O’Hare, Paul, Iain White, and Angela Connelly. 2016. Insurance as maladaptation: Resilience and the ‘business as usual’ paradox. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 6: 1175-93.
Persson, Äsa, Katarina Eckerberg, and Måns Nilsson. 2016. Institutionalization or wither away? Twenty-five years of environmental policy integration under shifting governance models in Sweden. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 3: 478-95.
Rambonilaza, Tina, Christophe Boschet, and Elodie Brahic. 2015. Moving towards multilevel governance of wetland resources: Local water organisations and institutional changes in France. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 2: 393-411.
Robinson, Pamela, and Christopher Gore. 2015. Municipal climate reporting: Gaps in monitoring and implications for governance and action. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 5: 1058-75.
Rugemalila, Richard, and Leah Gibbs¶. 2015. Urban water governance failure and local strategies for overcoming water shortages in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 2: 412-27.
Scholten, P., E.C.H. Keskitalo, and S. Meijerink. 2015. Bottom-up initiatives toward climate change adaptation in cases in the Netherlands and the UK: A complexity leadership perspective. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 5: 1024-38.
Sjöstedt, Viveca, and Daniela Kleinschmit. 2016. Frames in environmental policy integration: Are Swedish sectors on track? Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 3: 515-28.
Sotirov, Metodi, Marko Lovric, and Georg Winkel. 2015. Symbolic transformation of environmental governance: Implementation of EU biodiversity policy in Bulgaria and Croatia between Europeanization and domestic politics. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 5: 986-1004.
Suhardiman, Diana, Mark Giordano, and François François. 2015. Between interests and worldviews: The narrow path of the Mekong River Commission. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 1: 199-217.
Taylor, Andrew. 2015. Environmental governance in Croatia and Macedonia: Institutional creation and evolution. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 5: 969-85.
Taylor, Bruce M., and Ben P. Harman. 2016. Governing urban development for climate risk: What role for public–private partnerships? Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 5: 927-44.
Winkel, Georg, and Metodi Sotirov. 2016. Whose integration is this? European forest policy between the gospel of coordination, institutional competition, and a new spirit of integration. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 3: 496-514.
Zhang, Bing, Hanxun Fei, Yongjing Zhang, and Beibei Liu. 2015. Regulatory uncertainty and corporate pollution control strategies: An empirical study of the ‘Pay for Permit’ policy in the Tai Lake Basin. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 1: 118-35.
32-3 ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING
Aldunce, Paulina, John Handmer, Ruth Beilin, and Mark Howden. 2016. Is climate change framed as ‘business as usual’ or as a challenging issue? The practitioners’ dilemma. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 5: 999-1019.
Bel, Germà, Francisco González-Gómez, and Andrés J. Picazo-Tadeo. 2015. Does market concentration affect prices in the urban water industry? Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 6: 1546-65.
Blok, Anders, and Robin Tschötschel. 2016. World port cities as cosmopolitan risk community: Mapping urban climate policy experiments in Europe and East Asia. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 4: 717-36.
Bullock, Ryan C.L., E. Carina H. Keskitalo, Terhi Vuojala-Magga, and Emmeline Laszlo Ambjörnsson. 2016. Forestry administrator framings of responses to socioeconomic disturbance: Examples from northern regions in Canada, Sweden, and Finland. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 5: 945-62.
Evers, David. 2015. Formal institutional change and informal institutional persistence: The case of Dutch provinces implementing the Spatial Planning Act. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 2: 428-44.
Fitzgerald, Joan, and Jennifer Lenhart. 2016. Eco-districts: Can they accelerate urban climate planning? Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34, 2: 364-80.
Foss, Ann W., and Jeff Howard. 2015. The other end of the spectrum: Municipal climate change mitigation planning in the politically conservative Dallas–Fort Worth region. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 6: 1412-31.
Gazzola, Paola, Maggie H. Roe, and Paul J. Cowie. 2015. Marine spatial planning and terrestrial spatial planning: Reflecting on new agendas. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 5: 1156-72.
Hofstad, Hege. 2015. Handling tensions in the ‘everyday landscape’: Moving beyond the development–conservation conflict? Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 2: 358-75.
Wang, Yiming. 2015. Negotiating the farmland dilemmas: ‘Barefoot planners’ in China’s urban periphery. Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 33, 5: 1108-24.