schema:description 3 | "内容記述: PART I. INTER-, TRANS- AND SUPRA-NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY: THE RESEARCH AGENDA: 1. Dimitris Stevis, Valerie J. Assetto & Stephen P. Mumme (1989), `International Environmental Politics: A Theoretical Review of the Literature', in James P. Lester (ed.), Environmental Politics and Policy: Theories and Evidence, Chapter 11, Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 289-313 and 387-96; 2. Volker von Prittwitz (1990), `Several Approaches to the Analysis of International Environmental Policy', in Nordal ?kerman (ed.), Maintaining a Satisfactory Environment: An Agenda for International Environmental Policy, Chapter 1, Boulder: Westview Press, 1-33; 3. Henry Buller, Philip Lowe & Andrew Flynn (1993), `National Responses to the Europeanisation of Environmental Policy: A Selective Review of Comparative Research', in J.D. Liefferink, P.D.. Lowe and A.P.J. Mol (eds), European Integration and Environmental Policy, Chapter 10, Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, 175-95; 4. Steve Smith (1993), `Environment on the Periphery of International Relations: An Explanation', Environmental Politics, 2(4), Winter, 28-45; 5. Michael Z?rn (1998), `The Rise of International Environmental Politics: A Review of Current Research', World Politics, 50, July, 617-49. PART II. SUPRA-NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY MAKING: THE INSTITUTIONAL DYNAMICS: 6. Oran R. Young (1989), `The Politics of International Regime Formation: Managing Natural Resources and the Environment', International Organization, 43(3), Summer, 349-75; 7. Peter M. Haas (1990), 'Obtaining International Environmental Protection through Epistemic Consensus', Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 19(3), Winter, 347-63; 8. Angela Liberatore (1991),'Probelms of Transnational Policymaking: Environmental Policy in the European Community', European Journal of Political Research, 19(2,3), March/April, 281-305; 9. Matthew Paterson & Michael Grubb (1992), `The International Politics of Climate Change', International Affairs, 68(2), April, 293-310; 10. Mark Imber (1993), `Too Many Cooks? The Post-Rio Reform of the United Nations', International Affairs, 69(1), January, 55-70; 11. Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen (1994), `Global Climate Protection Policy: The Limits of Scientific Advice, Part 1', Global Environmental Change, 4(2), June, and `Global Climate Protection Policy: The Limits of scientific Advice, Part II', Global Environmental Change, 4(3), September, 140-59 and 185-200. PART III. EXPLORING THE INTERNATIONAL-NATIONAL POLICY NEXUS: 12. Wyn Grant, William Paterson & Coin Whitston (1988), `The Environmental Regulation of the Chemical Industry', in Government and the Chemical Industry: A Comparative Study of Britain and West Germany, Chapter 10, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 272-306; 13. Andrew Hurrell (1994), `A Crisis of Ecological Viability? Global Environmental Change and the Nation State', Political Studies, XLII, 146-65; 14. Detlef Spinz & Tapani Vaahtoranta (1994), `The Interest-Based Explanation of International Environmental Policy', International Organization, 48(1), Winter, 77-105; 15. Adrienne Heritier (1995), `...(more)" |