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  2. Environmental governance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_governance

    Environmental governance refers to the processes of decision-making involved in the control and management of the environment and natural resources. International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), define environmental governance as the "multi-level interactions (i.e., local, national, international/global) among, but not limited to, three main actors, i.e., state, market, and civil ...

  3. List of environmental films - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_environmental_films

    This article lists film and television works which feature or discuss the environment, environmentalism or environmental issues. Some notable and commercially successful films have featured environmental themes [1] and are commemorated through several environmental film festivals held annually.

  4. ESG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ESG

    Environmental, social, and governance approaches to investing, which evaluate a corporation's social and environmental impacts (cf. also "Woke capitalism") Earth system governance – Field of scholarly inquiry in the social sciences; Earth System Governance Project, an international, interdisciplinary research initiative started in 2009

  5. Earth system governance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_system_governance

    Applying the existing earth system governance (ESG) framework [1] to the challenge of understanding and analysing transformations towards sustainability. [2]Earth system governance (or earth systems governance) is a broad area of scholarly inquiry that builds on earlier notions of environmental policy and nature conservation, but puts these into the broader context of human-induced ...

  6. Environmental, social, and governance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental,_social,_and...

    Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) is shorthand for an investing principle that prioritizes environmental issues, social issues, and corporate governance. [1] Investing with ESG considerations is sometimes referred to as responsible investing or, in more proactive cases, impact investing .

  7. Collaborative environmental governance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative...

    Collaborative environmental governance is an approach to environmental governance which seeks to account for scale mismatch which may occur within social-ecological systems. It recognizes that interconnected human and biological systems exist on multiple geographic and temporal scales [ 1 ] [ 2 ] and thus CEG seeks to build collaboration among ...

  8. Ecogovernmentality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecogovernmentality

    Work done by Rutherford, on US Environmental Impact Assessments, and by Agrawal on local forest governance in India, are examples of this method of analysis.Both illustrate how the production of specific types of expert knowledge (statistical models of pollution, or the economic productivity of forests) coupled with specific technologies of government (the EIA assessment regime or local Forest ...

  9. GIS and environmental governance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GIS_and_environmental...

    This is perhaps the most obvious example of web-based mapping software (a more "citizen-friendly" form of GIS) and environmental governance discourses colliding head on. The notion of volunteered, user-generated, citizen data is the guiding mantra for such projects, and the cornerstone of any wider attempts to lobby national governments, engage ...