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Social Networks, Volume 75
Volume 75, Number , October 2023
- David B. Tindall, Nina Kolleck, John McLevey:
Social networks and anthropogenic climate change. 1-3 - Alexandra Goritz, Helge Jörgens, Nina Kolleck:
A matter of information - The influence of international bureaucracies in global climate governance networks. 4-15 - Francesca Pia Vantaggiato, Mark Lubell:
Functional differentiation in governance networks for sea level rise adaptation in the San Francisco Bay Area. 16-28 - Jose Daniel Teodoro, Christina Prell:
Learning to understand: disentangling the outcomes of stakeholder participation in climate change governance. 29-38 - Lasse Folke Henriksen, Caleb Gallemore, Kelvin Kamnde, Pilly Silvano, Asubisye Mwamfupe, Mette Olwig:
Networks and institutions in sustainable forest use: Evidence from South-East Tanzania. 39-54 - Kenneth A. Frank, Tingqiao Chen, Ethan Brown, Angela Larsen, William "BJ" Baule:
A network intervention for natural resource management in the context of climate change. 55-64 - Marlene Kammerer, Karin Ingold:
Actors and issues in climate change policy: The maturation of a policy discourse in the national and international context. 65-77 - Paul M. Wagner, Petr Ocelík, Antti Gronow, Tuomas Ylä-Anttila, Luisa Schmidt, Ana Delicado:
Network ties, institutional roles and advocacy tactics:Exploring explanations for perceptions of influence in climate change policy networks. 78-87 - Keiichi Satoh, Melanie Nagel, Volker Schneider:
Organizational roles and network effects on ideational influence in science-policy interface: Climate policy networks in Germany and Japan. 88-106 - Adam C. Howe, David B. Tindall, Mark C. J. Stoddart:
Drivers of tie formation in the Canadian climate change policy network: Belief homophily and social structural processes. 107-117 - Danielle J. Vesia, Matthew C. Mahutga, Bonnie Khánh Hà Buì:
Flattening the curve? The structure of the natural resource exchange network and CO2 emissions. 118-136 - Tommaso Venturini, Kari De Pryck, Robert Ackland:
Bridging in network organisations. The case of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). 137-147 - Ryan Light, Nicholas D. Theis, Achim Edelmann, James Moody, Richard York:
Clouding climate science: A comparative network and text analysis of consensus and anti-consensus scientists. 148-158 - Lorien Jasny, Dana R. Fisher:
How networks of social movement issues motivate climate resistance. 159-169 - Caterina Suitner, Leonardo Badia, Damiano Clementel, Laura Iacovissi, Matteo Migliorini, Bruno Gabriel Salvador Casara, Domenico Solimini, Magdalena Formanowicz, Tomaso Erseghe:
The rise of #climateaction in the time of the FridaysForFuture movement: A semantic network analysis. 170-185 - Camille Roth, Iina Hellsten:
Socio-semantic configuration of an online conversation space: The case of Twitter users discussing the #IPCC reports. 186-196 - Stefano Ghinoi, Riccardo De Vita, Francesco Silvestri:
Local policymakers' attitudes towards climate change: A multi-method case study. 197-209
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