The latest issue is out now. See below for details of the articles
Research articles
Geoengineering, climate change and ecological security
Matt McDonald
Pages: 565-585
Command and control or market-based instruments? Public support for policies to address vehicular pollution in Beijing and New Delhi
Liam F. Beiser-McGrath, Thomas Bernauer & Aseem Prakash
Pages: 586-618
Styles of decarbonization
Ankit Bhardwaj
Pages: 619-641
Anti-environmentalism and proto-authoritarian populism in Brazil: Bolsonaro and the defence of global agri-business
Filipe Mendes Motta & Gabriella Hauber
Pages: 642-662
From international organizations to local governments: how foreign environmental aid reaches subnational beneficiaries in Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico
Isabella Alcañiz & Agustina Giraudy
Pages: 663-683
Extreme weather and climate policy
Sam Rowan
Pages: 684-707
Sustainability spectacle and ‘post-oil’ greening initiatives
Natalie Koch
Pages: 708-731
Brief report
Climate change doesn’t win you a climate election: party competition in the 2021 Norwegian general election
Fay Madeleine Farstad & Marianne Aasen
Pages: 732-742
Book reviews
Understanding the rights of nature: a critical introduction by Mihnea Tănăsescu, Bielefeld, transcript Verlag, 2022.
Reviewed by: Ramon van der Does
Pages: 743-745
The Politics of Rights of Nature. Strategies for Building a More Sustainable World by Craig M. Kauffman and Pamela L. Martin, Cambridge, Massachusetts, MIT Press, 2021
Reviewed by: Mihnea Tănăsescu
Pages: 745-747
The Nutmeg’s Curse: parables for a planet in crisis by Amitav Ghosh, India, Penguin Allen Lane, 2021
Reviewed by: Saswat Samay Das, Ananya Roy Pratihar & Dipra Sarkhel
Pages: 747-750
Utopianism for a Dying Planet: Life after Consumerism by Gregory Claeys, Princeton, Princeton University Press, 2022
Reviewed by David Harnesk
Pages: 750-752
The Bangladesh Environmental Humanities Reader by Samina Luthfa, Mohammad Tanzimuddin Khan, and Munasir Kamal, Lanham, Lexinton Books, 2022
Reviewed by Samia Zaman
Pages: 752-754