Browsing by Author "Burch, S."
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Item The Earth System Governance Project as a network organization: a critical assessment after ten years(Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, 2019-04-05) Gordon, C.; Biermann, F.; Betsill, M.M.; Burch, S.; Dryzek, J.; Gupta, A.; Gupta, J.; Inoue, C.; Kalfagianni, A.; Kanie, N.; Olsson, L.; Persson, A.; Schroeder, H.; Scobie, M.The social sciences have engaged since the late 1980s in international collaborative programmes to study questions of sustainability and global change. This article offers an in-depth analysis of the largest long-standing social-science network in this field: the Earth System Governance Project. Originating as a core project of the former International Human Dimensions Programme on Global Environmental Change, the Earth System Governance Project has matured into a global, self sustaining research network, with annual conferences, numerous task forces, research centers, regional research fellow meetings, three book series, an open access flagship journal, and a lively presence in social media. The article critically reviews the experiences of the Earth System Governance network and its integration and interactions with other programmes over the last decade.Item New directions in earth system governance research(Earth System Governance, 2019) Burch, S.; Gupta, A.; Gordon, C.; et al.The Earth System Governance project is a global research alliance that explores novel, effective gover nance mechanisms to cope with the current transitions in the biogeochemical systems of the planet. A decade after its inception, this article offers an overview of the project's new research framework (which is built upon a review of existing earth system governance research), the goal of which is to continue to stimulate a pluralistic, vibrant and relevant research community. This framework is composed of contextual conditions (transformations, inequality, Anthropocene and diversity), which capture what is being observed empirically, and five sets of research lenses (architecture and agency, democracy and power, justice and allocation, anticipation and imagination, and adaptiveness and reflexivity). Ultimately the goal is to guide and inspire the systematic study of how societies prepare for accelerated climate change and wider earth system change, as well as policy responses