1.
Nunan, Fiona. Understanding Poverty and the Environment : Analytical Frameworks and Approaches [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2015. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/leicester/reader.action?docID=2005402&ppg=8
2.
Demaria F, Kothari A. The Post-Development Dictionary agenda: paths to the pluriverse. Third World Quarterly. 2017 Dec 2;38(12):2588–99.
3.
Vira B. Taking Natural Limits Seriously: Implications for Development Studies and the Environment. Development and Change. 2015 Jul;46(4):762–76.
4.
Nightingale AJ. Geography’s contribution to the Sustainable Development Goals. Dialogues in Human Geography. 2018 Jul;8(2):196–200.
5.
IIED Briefing. Impact of Climate Change on Least Developed Countries: are the SDGs possible? Available from: http://pubs.iied.org/pdfs/17298IIED.pdf
6.
R. P, P. R, M. W. Global Nature. In: Global political ecology [Internet]. London: Routledge; 2011. p. 1–47. Available from: http://le.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=5665079870002746&institutionId=2746&customerId=2745
7.
Nunan, Fiona. Understanding Poverty and the Environment : Analytical Frameworks and Approaches [Internet]. Taylor and Francis; 2015. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/leicester/reader.action?docID=2005402&ppg=8
8.
P R. Political Ecology: A Critical Introduction [Internet]. 2nd Edition. 2012. Available from: http://site.ebrary.com/lib/leicester/detail.action?docID=10506254
9.
Peet R, Watts M. Liberation ecologies: environment, development, social movements [Internet]. 2nd ed. London: Routledge; 2004. Available from: http://le.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=5663968580002746&institutionId=2746&customerId=2745
10.
Kull CA, Arnauld de Sartre X, Castro-Larrañaga M. The political ecology of ecosystem services. Geoforum. 2015 May;61:122–34.
11.
Birkenholtz T. Contesting expertise: The politics of environmental knowledge in northern Indian groundwater practices. Geoforum. 2008 Jan;39(1):466–82.
12.
Sian Sullivan. Green capitalism, and the cultural poverty of constructing nature as service-provider. Available from: http://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/6016/
13.
Baird IG, Barney K. The political ecology of cross-sectoral cumulative impacts: modern landscapes, large hydropower dams and industrial tree plantations in Laos and Cambodia. The Journal of Peasant Studies. 2017 Jul 4;44(4):769–95.
14.
Elmhirst R, Siscawati M, Basnett BS, Ekowati D. Gender and generation in engagements with oil palm in East Kalimantan, Indonesia: insights from feminist political ecology. The Journal of Peasant Studies. 2017 Aug 10;1–23.
15.
Huber A, Gorostiza S, Kotsila P, Beltrán MJ, Armiero M. Beyond "Socially Constructed” Disasters: Re-politicizing the Debate on Large Dams through a Political Ecology of Risk. Capitalism Nature Socialism. 2017 Jul 3;28(3):48–68.
16.
McCarthy J, Thatcher J. Visualizing new political ecologies: A critical data studies analysis of the World Bank’s renewable energy resource mapping initiative. Geoforum. 2017 Apr;
17.
SCALES IR. Lost in translation: conflicting views of deforestation, land use and identity in western Madagascar. The Geographical Journal. 2012 Mar;178(1):67–79.
18.
Peet, Dick, Robbins, Paul, Watts, Michael. Global political ecology [Internet]. London: Routledge; 2011. Available from: http://ezproxy.lib.le.ac.uk/login?url=http://www.myilibrary.com?id=303874
19.
Death C. Green states in Africa: beyond the usual suspects. Environmental Politics. 2016 Jan 2;25(1):116–35.
20.
Duit A, Feindt PH, Meadowcroft J. Greening Leviathan: the rise of the environmental state? Environmental Politics. 2016 Jan 2;25(1):1–23.
21.
Pattberg P, Widerberg O. Theorising Global Environmental Governance: Key Findings and Future Questions. Millennium - Journal of International Studies. 2015 Jan 1;43(2):684–705.
22.
Witter R, Marion Suiseeya KR, Gruby RL, Hitchner S, Maclin EM, Bourque M, et al. Moments of influence in global environmental governance. Environmental Politics. 2015 Nov 2;24(6):894–912.
23.
Bakker K, Ritts M. Smart Earth: A meta-review and implications for environmental governance. Global Environmental Change. 2018 Sep;52:201–11.
24.
Adams WM. Geographies of conservation II. Progress in Human Geography. 2017 Nov 5;
25.
Bäckstrand K, Kuyper JW, Linnér BO, Lövbrand E. Non-state actors in global climate governance: from Copenhagen to Paris and beyond. Environmental Politics. 2017 Jul 4;26(4):561–79.
26.
Rajão R, Duarte T. Performing postcolonial identities at the United Nations’ climate negotiations. Postcolonial Studies. 2018 Jul 3;21(3):364–78.
27.
Thompson MC, Baruah M, Carr ER. Seeing REDD+ as a project of environmental governance. Environmental Science & Policy. 2011 Mar;14(2):100–10.
28.
-- UN-REDD Programme - home -- [Internet]. Available from: http://www.un-redd.org/
29.
Fairhead J, Leach M, Scoones I. Green Grabbing: a new appropriation of nature? Journal of Peasant Studies. 2012 Apr;39(2):237–61.
30.
Schoneveld GC. Host country governance and the African land rush: 7 reasons why large-scale farmland investments fail to contribute to sustainable development. Geoforum. 2017 Jul;83:119–32.
31.
Corson C, MacDonald KI. Enclosing the global commons: the convention on biological diversity and green grabbing. Journal of Peasant Studies. 2012 Apr;39(2):263–83.
32.
Wolford W, Borras SM, Hall R, Scoones I, White B. Governing Global Land Deals: The Role of the State in the Rush for Land. Development and Change. 2013 Mar;44(2):189–210.
33.
Shete M, Rutten M. Impacts of large-scale farming on local communities’ food security and income levels – Empirical evidence from Oromia Region, Ethiopia. Land Use Policy. 2015 Sep;47:282–92.
34.
Bylander M. Depending on the Sky: Environmental Distress, Migration, and Coping in Rural Cambodia. International Migration. 2015 Oct;53(5):135–47.
35.
Hunter LM, Luna JK, Norton RM. Environmental Dimensions of Migration. Annual Review of Sociology. 2015 Aug 14;41(1):377–97.
36.
Farbotko C, Lazrus H. The first climate refugees? Contesting global narratives of climate change in Tuvalu. Global Environmental Change. 2012 May;22(2):382–90.
37.
Berchin II, Valduga IB, Garcia J, de Andrade Guerra JBSO. Climate change and forced migrations: An effort towards recognizing climate refugees. Geoforum. 2017 Aug;84:147–50.
38.
Ransan-Cooper H, Farbotko C, McNamara KE, Thornton F, Chevalier E. Being(s) framed: The means and ends of framing environmental migrants. Global Environmental Change. 2015 Nov;35:106–15.
39.
Adger WN, Arnell NW, Black R, Dercon S, Geddes A, Thomas DSG. Focus on environmental risks and migration: causes and consequences. Environmental Research Letters. 2015 Jun 1;10(6).
40.
Verhoeven H. Gardens of Eden or Hearts of Darkness? The Genealogy of Discourses on Environmental Insecurity and Climate Wars in Africa. Geopolitics. 2014 Oct 2;19(4):784–805.
41.
Benjaminsen TA, Alinon K, Buhaug H, Buseth JT. Does climate change drive land-use conflicts in the Sahel? Journal of Peace Research. 2012 Jan 1;49(1):97–111.
42.
Verhoeven H. Climate Change, Conflict and Development in Sudan: Global Neo-Malthusian Narratives and Local Power Struggles. Development and Change. 2011 May;42(3):679–707.
43.
Scheffran J, Ide T, Schilling J. Violent climate or climate of violence? Concepts and relations with focus on Kenya and Sudan. The International Journal of Human Rights. 2014 Apr 3;18(3):369–90.
44.
Walker G. Beyond Distribution and Proximity: Exploring the Multiple Spatialities of Environmental Justice. Antipode. 2009 Sep;41(4):614–36.
45.
Martin A, McGuire S, Sullivan S. Global environmental justice and biodiversity conservation. The Geographical Journal. 2013 Jun;179(2):122–31.
46.
Sikor T, Cầm H, Sikor et al R on the rocks? COF and P of J in V. REDD+ on the rocks? Conflict Over Forest and Politics of Justice in Vietnam. Human Ecology. 2016 Apr;44(2):217–27.
47.
Martin A, Coolsaet B, Corbera E, Dawson NM, Fraser JA, Lehmann I, et al. Justice and conservation: The need to incorporate recognition. Biological Conservation. 2016 May;197:254–61.
48.
Agyeman J, Schlosberg D, Craven L, Matthews C. Trends and Directions in Environmental Justice: From Inequity to Everyday Life, Community, and Just Sustainabilities. Annual Review of Environment and Resources. 2016 Oct 17;41(1):321–40.
49.
Martin A. Global environmental in/justice, in practice: introduction. The Geographical Journal. 2013 Jun;179(2):98–104.
50.
Upton C. The new politics of pastoralism: Identity, justice and global activism. Geoforum. 2014 Jul;54:207–16.
51.
Fisher JA, Cavanagh CJ, Sikor T, Mwayafu DM. Linking notions of justice and project outcomes in carbon offset forestry projects: Insights from a comparative study in Uganda. Land Use Policy. 2018 Apr;73:259–68.
52.
Allan JI, Hadden J. Exploring the framing power of NGOs in global climate politics. Environmental Politics. 2017 Jul 4;26(4):600–20.
53.
Norman ES. Standing Up for Inherent Rights: The Role of Indigenous-Led Activism in Protecting Sacred Waters and Ways of Life. Society & Natural Resources. 2017 Apr 3;30(4):537–53.
54.
Martin A, Gross-Camp N, Kebede B, McGuire S, Munyarukaza J. Whose environmental justice? Exploring local and global perspectives in a payments for ecosystem services scheme in Rwanda. Geoforum. 2014 Jul;54:167–77.
55.
Wilson K. Worlds beyond the political? Post-development approaches in practices of transnational solidarity activism. Third World Quarterly. 2017 Dec 2;38(12):2684–702.
56.
Zeitoun M, Dirar A, El Moghraby A, Hashim MJ. A "justice” reading of the trans-national struggle of the people displaced by the Merowe Dam. Local Environment. 2017 Aug 3;1–17.
57.
Kumar K. The sacred mountain: Confronting global capital at Niyamgiri. Geoforum. 2014 Jul;54:196–206.