14 research outputs found

    International Development

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    Горный журнал. 1883. [№ 10]. Октябрь

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    0|3|Оглавление четвертого тома 1883 год [c. 3]0|5|Официальный отдел [c. 5]1|5|Приказы по горному ведомству [c. 5]0|9|Горное и заводское дело [c. 9]1|9|Исследование гидравлической силы реки Ижоры / Ив. Тиме [c. 9]0|121|Геология, геогнозия и палеонтология [c. 121]1|121|Важнейшие рефераты по геологии. Некоторые замечания об образовании поперечных долин / Титце [c. 121]0|156|Химия, физика и минералогия [c. 156]1|156|О некоторых аналитических работах, произведенных в Барнаульской лаборатории / И. А. Антипов [c. 156]0|176|Горное хозяйство, статистика и история [c. 176]1|176|Второй съезд горнозаводчиков и углепромышленников подмосковного бассейна / В. Тыдельский [c. 176]0|181|Вкладки [c. 181

    Innovations in Climate Policy:Conclusions and new directions

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    Academics and practitioners have responded to the gridlock in the international climate-change regime by more actively exploring the ability of individuals and/or groups of states to fill in the associated ‘governance gaps’ by engaging in policy innovation at the level of the nation state, including its regional and local emanations. Here, we draw together the findings of a collection that, for the first time, explores policy innovation at this level from three key perspectives: the source of new policy elements (‘invention’), their wider entry into use (‘diffusion’), and their projected and/ or real effects (‘evaluation’). After critically reviewing the findings of the contributions from these perspectives, we explore new directions for definitional, conceptual-theoretical, and empirical work in this field. Finally, we explore how a more systematic analysis of policy innovation dynamics can inform a much fuller understanding of climate policy and governance across different sites and scales

    The two faces of security in hybrid political orders: a framework for analysis and research

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    This paper reframes the security and development debate through fresh theoretical lenses, which view security as highly contested both in the realm of politics and in the realm of ideas. For some analysts security concerns political power, including the use of organised force to establish and maintain social orders and to protect them from external and internal threats. For others it is about how individuals and communities are protected (or protect themselves) from violence, abuse of power and other existential risks. We integrate both approaches whilst placing our focus on the deep tensions between them. Combining them is especially apposite in the hybrid political orders of conflict-torn regions in the developing world – where the state and its monopoly of violence are contested and diverse state and non-state security actors coexist, collaborate or compete
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