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Journal articles on the topic 'Actors of energy law'

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1

Tews, Kerstin. "The Crash of a Policy Pilot to Legally Define Community Energy. Evidence from the German Auction Scheme." Sustainability 10, no. 10 (2018): 3397. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su10103397.

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“Community energy” is a highly contested issue not only in the German energy transition governance but also in the recent legislative procedure to recast energy market legislation within the EU’s “Winter Package”. This paper analyses the effects of the privileges for “community energy actors” in the German auction scheme for on-shore wind energy. Those privileges aim to guarantee a level playing field for small actors and to enhance societal acceptance. The results of the first rounds of auctions did not merely reveal an acceptable level of losses due to recognized trade-offs between policy ob
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Trevisanut, Seline. "The Role of Private Actors in Offshore Energy: Shifting Models of Participation." International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law 29, no. 4 (2014): 645–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15718085-12341331.

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The role of private actors in the offshore energy industry has expanded with regard to both the law-making processes and the implementation of the relevant legal framework. This article critically examines the role private actors are playing in the offshore energy sector in order to delineate some trends in the ways in which private actors act and interact at the international level. It focuses in particular on instances where there is a delegation of regulatory powers or the implementation duties from the international and supranational level to the private actors. The article ultimately stri
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Priscilla, Tiara, Edi Wahjuni, and Ayu Citra Santyaningtyas. "Consumer Protection for Fast Food Restaurants which not Qualify Food Health Standards." International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science VII, no. VI (2023): 1856–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.47772/ijriss.2023.7755.

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The purpose of this research is to examine the standardization of fast-food restaurants in Indonesia which not qualify food health standards as the responsibility of business actors in serving fast-food restaurants and dispute resolution for losses suffered by consumers. The research method used is normative juridical with a statute approach and conceptual approach. The results showed that there is no specific regulation related to the standardization of fast-food restaurants in Indonesia. The responsibility of business actors is based on Article 86 paragraph (2), Article 94 paragraph (1) and
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CSERES, KJ. "The Active Energy Consumer in EU Law." European Journal of Risk Regulation 9, no. 2 (2018): 227–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/err.2018.7.

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AbstractWith the availability of cheaper technology and the rise of digitalisation, consumers can actively participate in markets and also offer their own services or self-/co-produce products and services. Active consumers are fundamental building-blocks of the European Union’s goal to achieve smart, sustainable and inclusive growth in Europe. In the energy sector active consumers play a key role in promoting competition, ensuring affordable energy prices and security of supply, as well as contributing to the EU’s environmental and climate goals. By engaging in more efficient energy use, cons
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Harleando, Putra, and Sapto Hermawan. "Pelaksanaan Izin Pertambangan Rakyat di Sungai Progo." Jurnal Discretie 1, no. 2 (2020): 78. http://dx.doi.org/10.20961/jd.v1i2.50226.

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<em>Yogyakarta Special Region is a mining industry area, especially in Bantul district. One of the most popular mining commodities is the sand mining commodity along the Progo watershed. Many of the mining business actors already have permits but also many are illegal. This study aims to determine how mining business actors implement mining permits and the impacts on the surrounding environment and solutions to overcome them. This type of research used in writing this law is empirical legal research. The nature of the research used by the author in writing this law is. The objects of res
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Boute, A. "Renewable Energy Federalism in Russia: Regions as New Actors for the Promotion of Clean Energy." Journal of Environmental Law 25, no. 2 (2013): 261–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jel/eqt005.

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van der Waal, Esther C., Alexandra M. Das, and Tineke van der Schoor. "Participatory Experimentation with Energy Law: Digging in a ‘Regulatory Sandbox’ for Local Energy Initiatives in the Netherlands." Energies 13, no. 2 (2020): 458. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en13020458.

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To facilitate energy transition, regulators have devised ‘regulatory sandboxes’ to create a participatory experimentation environment for exploring revision of energy law in several countries. These sandboxes allow for a two-way regulatory dialogue between an experimenter and an approachable regulator to innovate regulation and enable new socio-technical arrangements. However, these experiments do not take place in a vacuum but need to be formulated and implemented in a multi-actor, polycentric decision-making system through collaboration with the regulator but also energy sector incumbents, s
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Saintier, Séverine. "Community Energy Companies in the UK: A Potential Model for Sustainable Development in “Local” Energy?" Sustainability 9, no. 8 (2017): 1325. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su9081325.

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The rise of renewable energy sources (RES) comes with a shift in attention from government and market energy governance to local community initiatives and self-regulation. Although this shift is generally welcome at domestic and EU level, the regulatory dimension, at both levels, is nevertheless not adapted to this multi-actor market since prosumers are not empowered and energy justice is far from achieved. The rise, in the UK, of Community Interest Companies (consumers and local actors’ collectives) in the energy sector provides an interesting perspective as it allows a whole system’s view. R
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van der Waal, Esther, Henny van der Windt, and Ellen van Oost. "How Local Energy Initiatives Develop Technological Innovations: Growing an Actor Network." Sustainability 10, no. 12 (2018): 4577. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su10124577.

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Local energy initiatives are of growing interest to studies of grassroots innovation for sustainability. Some of these initiatives have developed novel technological solutions to fulfil local demand for renewable energy. However, whereas the upscaling and diffusion of grassroots innovations has been extensively discussed in the literature, their emergence has received very little attention so far. We will therefore focus on how energy initiatives can develop technological innovations by bringing together local actors and creating a fit to local circumstances. Grounded in actor network theory (
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Inguaggiato, Carla, Michele Graziano Ceddia, Maurice Tschopp, and Dimitris Christopoulos. "Collaborative Governance Networks: A Case Study of Argentina’s Forest Law." Sustainability 13, no. 18 (2021): 10000. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su131810000.

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Deforestation causes biodiversity loss and the eviction of small-scale ranchers and indigenous people. Accordingly, it is a global issue in environmental politics. This article analyzes a participatory governance system associated with the implementation of Argentina’s forest law in a hotspot of deforestation: the province of Salta in the Gran Chaco ecoregion. Specifically, this article investigates policy actors’ core beliefs, how they match with policy network clusters, and how this affects the implementation of the forest law. The study is based on a unique data set derived from extensive f
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Taghavi, Naghmeh. "Sustainable Development of Operations: Actors’ Involvement in the Process of Energy Efficiency Improvements." Sustainability 13, no. 11 (2021): 6121. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13116121.

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This study empirically investigates the involvement of actors in the process of energy-efficiency improvements in operations to align strategic sustainability goals across and within operations. The study analyzes development efforts stemming from actors’ decisions and actions that contribute to the process of energy efficiency improvements using semi-structured interviews and secondary information. Data is analyzed using thematic coding. The study deepens the understanding of how firms undertake the transition towards integrating strategic goals for energy efficiency into operations by strate
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Kaban, Wydhea Eikel Primsa, Sri Hidayani, and Ridho Mubarak. "Perlindungan Hukum Bagi Pelaku Usaha Terhadap Tindak Pidana Penipuan dalam Transaksi Jual Beli Online (Studi Kepolisian Resor Kota Besar Medan)." JUNCTO: Jurnal Ilmiah Hukum 5, no. 1 (2023): 43–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.31289/juncto.v5i1.1618.

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Technology has developed very quickly and rapidly in this day and age. Therefore, qualified legal protection is needed for business actors from online-based criminal acts of fraud. The purpose of this study is to find out legal protection efforts for business actors against criminal acts of fraud in online transactions carried out at the Medan Polrestabes; as well as obstacles that occur in the disclosure of criminal acts of online transaction fraud. This research is normative juridical law research, namely research conducted based on secondary data. The nature of this research is descriptive
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Cariola, Maria. "Dying in the "Southern Macrozone": Eventfulness and Externalities in Chile's Wind Energy Rush / Morir en la "Macrozona Sur": acontecimientos y externalidades en el boom de energía eólica en Chile." Journal of Latin American Geography 23, no. 3 (2024): 167–92. https://doi.org/10.1353/lag.2024.a948100.

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abstract: This paper examines the conditions under which the externalities of capitalist energy development become meaningful in Mapuche territory in Chile. I describe two deaths that occurred outside the construction site of the Malleco Wind Farm and analyze how different actors struggled to make sense of them, establish them as eventful, and identify different actors as responsible. One, the death of a local motorcyclist in a traffic collision with employees of the wind farm company, became an accident in official framings. The other, the death of a police officer in the context of police re
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Mairomi, Harry Wirngo, and Jude Ndzifon Kimengsi. "Community-Based Actors and Participation in Rangeland Management. Lessons from the Western Highlands of Cameroon." Sustainability 13, no. 4 (2021): 1700. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13041700.

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Participation is a key component in socioecological systems (especially rangeland) governance. Yet, in many parts of sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), this attribute is yet to be fully understood and/or mainstreamed in natural resource management. This suggests the need for renewed learning on how actors are (dis)engaged in rangeland governance. With a litany of studies focusing on rangeland transformation, complementary evidence which unpacks actor’s participation in rangeland management are required in SSA. Through a survey of 333 households from 12 pastoral communities in Cameroon’s Western Highlan
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Savaresi, Annalisa. "The Rise of Community Energy from Grassroots to Mainstream: The Role of Law and Policy." Journal of Environmental Law 31, no. 3 (2019): 487–510. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jel/eqz006.

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Abstract In recent years, national and subnational law-makers and policy-makers have increasingly adopted measures to stimulate decentralised renewable energy generation, turning local and rural communities into prominent actors in the energy transition. The recast of the EU Renewable Energy Directive follows this trend, prompting all EU Member States to adopt measures to spearhead community energy. Yet to date, only a handful of ‘pioneer’ EU Member States—most saliently Denmark, Germany and the UK—have accrued significant experience with the mainstreaming of community energy. This article ref
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Downie, Christian. "Fighting for King Coal’s Crown: Business Actors in the US Coal and Utility Industries." Global Environmental Politics 17, no. 1 (2017): 21–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/glep_a_00388.

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Over the last two decades, business actors have received growing attention in global environmental politics. In the context of climate change, scholars have demonstrated the capacity of business actors to directly shape outcomes at the national, international, and transnational levels. However, very little work has focused exclusively on business actors in the coal and utility industries. This is surprising, given that resistance from these industries could delay or even derail government attempts to address climate change. Accordingly, this article focuses directly on the preferences of busin
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Harnesk, David, and Sara Brogaard. "Social Dynamics of Renewable Energy—How the European Union’s Renewable Energy Directive Triggers Land Pressure in Tanzania." Journal of Environment & Development 26, no. 2 (2016): 156–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1070496516681043.

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The European Union plays a globally influential role in environmental legislation, with policies and regulation rooted in particular norms. Through a narrative on regulatory capitalism, ecological modernization, and diffusion, we trace how the promotion of renewable energy in transport through subsidies, mandatory targets, and prescriptive criteria for liquid biofuels mobilize social forces for its market development. The study identifies prevailing norms, mechanisms of decision making, and the network of actors involved in this regulatory regime and also identifies where and through whom its
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Byttebier, Koen, José Grabiel Luis Cordova, and Yanelys Delgado Triana. "Decentralized Energy Generation for Sustainable Energy Development in EU." European Energy and Environmental Law Review 32, Issue 4 (2023): 164–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/eelr2023010.

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Human history has been the story of the constant search for energy, e.g., in terms of food conversion to energy. Early on in its origins, humankind has had to satisfy its energy demand through available energy resources. Although the use of non-renewable energy sources has been perpetuated over time, there are currently many strategies implemented by states to develop energy transition for sustainable development. An example of this is the emergence of decentralization initiatives such as prosumers and energy communities. Within the European Union, the Directives 2018/2001 and 2019/944 open a
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Wisniewski, Radoslaw, Aneta Nowakowska-Krystman, Tomasz Kownacki, and Piotr Daniluk. "The Impact of the Rule of Law on Energy Policy in European Union Member States." Energies 17, no. 3 (2024): 739. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en17030739.

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Research pertaining to the dual-tier political system within the European Union (EU), specifically concerning the genesis and execution of EU policies, has garnered substantial scholarly attention. These inquiries delve into multifaceted dimensions, encompassing institutional dynamics, procedural intricacies, questions of legitimacy, and intricate relational dynamics entailing international diplomacy with other actors within the realm of international law. Nonetheless, a particularly intriguing and underexplored facet remains: the influence of member states’ compliance with the rule of law on
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Ludovico, Nuccio, Marc Esteve Del Valle, and Franco Ruzzenenti. "Mapping the Dutch Energy Transition Hyperlink Network." Sustainability 12, no. 18 (2020): 7629. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12187629.

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The Internet facilitates connections between a range of Dutch actors with a stake in the energy transition, including governments, environmental organizations, media outlets and corporations. These connections tease a hyperlink network affecting public access to information on energy transition issues. Despite its societal relevance, however, the characteristics of this network remain understudied. The main goals of this study are to shed some light on the topological characteristics of the Dutch energy transition hyperlink network and reveal the main topics discussed in the network. To do so,
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EBERLEIN, BURKARD. "The Making of the European Energy Market: The Interplay of Governance and Government." Journal of Public Policy 28, no. 1 (2008): 73–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0143814x08000780.

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ABSTRACTThis case study asks whether delegated, sectoral governance by private actors and arm’s-length agencies enhances policy efficacy or does sectoral governance require a shadow of hierarchy cast by government actors to deliver desired policy results? EU energy market liberalisation shows that sectoral governance successfully mobilises regulatory expertise, capacity and legitimacy and delivers workable norms and rules for market transactions in a complex policy environment. However, it also finds that the efficacy of sectoral governance mechanisms is constrained by distributive conflicts b
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Singer-Brodowski, Mandy, Janne von Seggern, Anika Duveneck, and Nadine Etzkorn. "Moving (Reflexively within) Structures. The Governance of Education for Sustainable Development in Germany." Sustainability 12, no. 7 (2020): 2778. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12072778.

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The educational governance discourse aims at capturing how different actors, participating in a specific political process, coordinate their actions while working together within multi-actor policy networks. In Germany, such multi-actor policy networks have set up ambitious political goals on the implementation of education for sustainable development (ESD) that has resulted in the National Action Plan. The current domestic slogan “From Project to Structure” reveals the overall aim of scaling ESD. In this article, a governance perspective is used to examine how the actors involved in ESD in Ge
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Abdul Ghani, Latifah, Ilyanni Syazira Nazaran, Nora’aini Ali, and Marlia Mohd Hanafiah. "Improving Prediction Accuracy of Socio-Human Relationships in a Small-Scale Desalination Plant." Sustainability 12, no. 17 (2020): 6949. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12176949.

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This study examines who are the social actors in coordinating the environmental hot spots along the process of desalination. The integrated model design of life cycle modeling and Social Network Analysis is evaluated holistically by the inventory of life cycle and actor engagement ratings. Instances of the first small-scale reverse osmosis desalination plant project in Kelantan, Malaysia were used to meet the demands of this study. Environmental performance is measured through the Eco-Indicator 99 method in the Life Cycle Assessment Principles. Meanwhile, the network analysis of the actors’ ne
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Enzus Tinianus. "MONOPOLI DI BIDANG TEKNOLOGI INFORMASI." Jurnal Hukum Samudra Keadilan 16, no. 2 (2021): 247–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.33059/jhsk.v16i2.4537.

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Competition in the business world causes business actors to sometimes resort to various ways to conduct unfair business competition, resulting in losses for other business actors. In the virtual world (information technology for example) this action is often found. So it is necessary to study how the prohibition of monopolistic practices and unfair business competition against businesses in the field of information technology. This research is a normative legal research, the main data of which is obtained through library research. Based on the results of the research, it is known that the form
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Hoicka, Christina E., Jessica Conroy, and Anna L. Berka. "Reconfiguring actors and infrastructure in city renewable energy transitions: A regional perspective." Energy Policy 158 (November 2021): 112544. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.enpol.2021.112544.

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Tan, Honggang. "Dynamics of Policy Change in China: A Case Study of the Renewable Energy Law." Chinese Public Administration Review 4, no. 1-2 (2007): 57–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.22140/cpar.v4i1.2.74.

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With its rapid economic development, China plays a key role in the world energy economy. Its future energy path will influence the world's future. On February 28, 2005, China passed a comprehensive Renewable Energy Law, which was a major policy change for the Chinese government. This article investigates the legislative process of the law and uses this as a case to analyze the dynamics of policy change in China. Throughout this article, I try to explain two highlights of the process: that the law was passed quickly and overwhelmingly, and that the process included various actors, including int
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Tan, Honggang. "Dynamics of Policy Changes in China: A Case Study of the Renewable Energy Law." Chinese Public Administration Review 4, no. 1/2 (2016): 57. http://dx.doi.org/10.22140/cpar.v4i1/2.74.

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With its rapid economic development, China plays a key role in the world energy economy. Its future energy path will influence the world’s future. On February 28, 2005, China passed a comprehensive Renewable Energy Law, which was a major policy change for the Chinese government. This article investigates the legislative process of the law and uses this as a case to analyze the dynamics of policy change in China. Throughout this article, I try to explain two highlights of the process: that the law was passed quickly and overwhelmingly, and that the process included various actors, including int
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Khodke, Aditi, Atsushi Watabe, and Nigel Mehdi. "Implementation of Accelerated Policy-Driven Sustainability Transitions: Case of Bharat Stage 4 to 6 Leapfrogs in India." Sustainability 13, no. 8 (2021): 4339. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13084339.

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In the face of pressing environmental challenges, governments must pledge to achieve sustainability transitions within an accelerated timeline, faster than leaving these transitions to the market mechanisms alone. This had led to an emergent approach within the sustainability transition research (STR): Accelerated policy-driven sustainability transitions (APDST). Literature on APDST asserts its significance in addressing pressing environmental and development challenges as regime actors like policymakers enact change. It also assumes support from other incumbent regime actors like the industri
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Letnar-Černič, Jernej. "Institutional actors as international law-makers in Business and Human Rights: The United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights and beyond." Pravni zapisi 12, no. 2 (2021): 594–617. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/pravzap0-35034.

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Business and human rights is an interdisciplinary field, which advocates that both state and businesses are duty-holders of human rights obligations. The area of business and human rights aims to regulate and prevent negative impact of business operations at all levels of global supply chains. The approach of international law in this regard has so far been piecemeal. States have been traditionally a principal participant in the international community. Nonetheless, this article aims to test arguments submitted by Jovanović in his 2019 book "The Nature of International Law" that institutional
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Zurek, Monika, George Garbutt, Theresa Lieb, Tim Hess, and John Ingram. "Increasing Resilience of the UK Fresh Fruit and Vegetable System to Water-Related Risks." Sustainability 12, no. 18 (2020): 7519. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12187519.

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The many economic, regulatory and environmental pressures on growing, processing, distributing and retailing UK-produced fresh fruit and vegetables (FF&V) are managed by a complex set of actors before reaching the consumer. Much of this production takes place in the driest parts of the country which are characterised as “water scarce”. While physical risk is a key component of water-related risks to growers, different actors in the system face other types of risk, such as supply chain risks, food safety risks, reputational risks and/or regulatory risks. In this paper we reveal how differen
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Lundsgaard-Hansen, Lara, Flurina Schneider, Julie Zaehringer, Christoph Oberlack, Win Myint, and Peter Messerli. "Whose Agency Counts in Land Use Decision-Making in Myanmar? A Comparative Analysis of Three Cases in Tanintharyi Region." Sustainability 10, no. 10 (2018): 3823. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su10103823.

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Myanmar has experienced profound transformations of land use and land governance, often at the expense of smallholders. Empirical evidence on the agency of actors included and excluded in land use decision-making remains scarce. This study analyses who influences land use decision-making, how they do this, and under what circumstances smallholders are included. Comparing three land use trajectories in southern Myanmar, we analysed actors’ agency—conceived as the meanings and means behind (re)actions—in land use decision-making using data from focus groups and interviews. Results showed that un
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Widayat, Yanne Yuniarti, Nina Karlina, Mas Dadang Enjat Munajat, and Sinta Ningrum. "Mapping Policy Actors Using Social Network Analysis on Integrated Urban Farming Program in Bandung City." Sustainability 15, no. 12 (2023): 9612. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su15129612.

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This study aimed to produce a network structure in Integrated Urban Farming Program in Bandung City to map the involved policy actors to realize a food-smart city. In this study, a mixed method was used with an exploratory sequential strategy involving policy actors from the government, private sector, academia, community, and mass media. To obtain a network structure in Integrated Urban Farming toward determining the most important actors, the Social Network Analysis (SNA) approach was also employed through the Gephi application. From this context, the structure emphasized four dimensions, na
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Aubin, Nzaou-Kongo. "The Players in the New Energy System: What Role for the State in the Anthropocene Era?" African Review of Law and Critical Thinking 2, no. 1 (2021): 179–209. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5327654.

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This article explores the significant role that the state is still expected to play in initiating and implementing the energy transition. In this regard, it is laid out in three parts. Part I focuses on the premise of the role that derives from constitutional law. This role is considered classic, because it is based on different functions of the state, and the legitimate constrain that distinguishes it from other social actors, including non-state actors. Tremendous materials are offered by the analysis either from the perspective of sociology or law studies when it comes to the specific situa
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Hutrianto, Felicia Michelle, Hanif Nur Widhiyanti, and Moch Zairul Alam. "Urgensi Penetapan Pedoman Standar Teknis Green Economy pada Undang-Undang No. 5 Tahun 1999." RechtJiva 1, no. 3 (2024): 386–403. https://doi.org/10.21776/rechtjiva.v1n3.1.

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Green economy is an important foundation in achieving sustainable development, which integrates economic, environmental and social aspects. Green economy aims to create economic stability through optimizing energy and environmental balance in the production and marketing of green products which contributes to increasing GDP. However, there is no explicit regulation regarding the green economy in business competition law, which creates a legal vacuum. This research aims to examine the relationship between the green economy concept and business competition law, as well as identifying the legal i
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Olawuyi, Damilola, and Victoria R. Nalule. "Ensuring Universal Access to Modern Energy Services in Times of Pandemic Related Disruptions: Legal Challenges and Potential Responses." Journal of Sustainable Development Law and Policy (The) 12, no. 1 (2021): 49–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/jsdlp.v12i1.3.

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 The significant disruptions to global energy markets across the world, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, has shown that without robust law and governance frameworks to mitigate and manage pandemic-related disruptions to energy supply, global efforts to achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals may be stifled.
 This article examines legal and governance aspects of designing and implementing disaster risk reduction and resilience (DRRR) frameworks to ensure the security of energy supply in times of pandemic related disruptions. Various legal and i
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Bolton, Ronan, Timothy J. Foxon, and Stephen Hall. "Energy transitions and uncertainty: Creating low carbon investment opportunities in the UK electricity sector." Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 34, no. 8 (2016): 1387–403. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0263774x15619628.

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This paper examines how actors in the UK electricity sector are attempting to deliver investment in low carbon generation. Low carbon technologies, because of their relative immaturity, capital intensity and low operational costs, do not readily fit with existing electricity markets and investment templates which were designed for fossil fuel based energy. We analyse key electricity market and infrastructure policies in the UK and highlight how these are aimed at making low carbon technologies ‘investable’ by reducing uncertainty, managing investment risks and repositioning actors within the e
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Kratochvíl, Petr, and Matúš Mišík. "Bad external actors and good nuclear energy: Media discourse on energy supplies in the Czech Republic and Slovakia." Energy Policy 136 (January 2020): 111058. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.enpol.2019.111058.

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Tahon, Caroline, and Peter J. Batt. "An Exploratory Study of the Sustainable Practices Used at Each Level of the Bordeaux Wine Value Chain." Sustainability 13, no. 17 (2021): 9760. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13179760.

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This paper explores environmental and socially sustainable practices among different actors in the Bordeaux wine value chain (WVC). The main research question is to identify the extent to which the different actors in the wine value chain are aligned in terms of practices and beliefs concerning the importance and implementation of sustainable practices. While each actor in the Bordeaux WVC performs different sustainable practices depending on the activities that they undertake, some share common practices and exert some upstream pressure on the value chain as they seek to support sustainable p
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Varho, Vilja. "Wind power policy options in finland – analysis of energy policy actors' views." European Environment 16, no. 4 (2006): 198–212. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eet.416.

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Gruber, Mirjam. "The Integration of Local Actors in Policy Implementation: The Case of Organic Farming in Costa Rica." Sustainability 14, no. 12 (2022): 7265. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su14127265.

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Like other countries of the world, Costa Rica faced the challenge of dealing with a variety of trade-offs when implementing sustainability goals in agriculture. Very often, economic promotion is in conflict with goals regarding human and environmental health protection. Organic farming practices could provide strategies to overcome some of these trade-offs. However, in Costa Rica, the majority of farmers still relies on conventional farm practices. In this paper, I investigate the potential for a sustainable transformation in Costa Rica’s agriculture by focusing on organic farming policies. I
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Aubin, Nzaou-Kongo, and Boumakani Benjamin. "Mediating Energy Resources Development and Environmental Concerns: An Initial Step Towards the Energy Transition." Carbon & Climate Law Review 16, no. 2 (2022): 129–41. https://doi.org/10.21552/cclr/2022/2/6.

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This article examines two overreaching dimensions that represent the initial step towards the energy transition in the context of oil and gas development. It is agreed that the problems facing the climate system are caused by human activity, and oil and gas production plays a particular role. Therefore, it appears important to consider the dimension related to the integration of environmental standards as the initial step of the ecological transition from the production of energy from fossil-fuel sources. This study is then based on the development of legislation in sub-Saharan African countri
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Allataifeh, Haneen, and Sedigheh Moghavvemi. "The Individual Dimension of Digital Innovation: The Altered Roles of Innovation Agents and Market Actors." Sustainability 13, no. 16 (2021): 8971. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13168971.

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Digital innovation entails the employment of new technologies to address business issues and to create practices that lead to the achievement of sustainability. It is observed that digital technology alters the individual dimension of the innovation process, allowing for a set of heterogenous actors to become active engagers in the process. A review of the previous research revealed a lack of focus on the roles these different actors play in the digital innovation process, as well as the mechanisms by which digital technology facilitates actor engagement, calling for research to shed some ligh
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Nazarkassym, Zh A. "Status of the Caspian Sea Issue within the Framework of International Law: 1991–2014 years." Iasaýı ýnıversıtetіnіń habarshysy 123, no. 1 (2022): 292–301. http://dx.doi.org/10.47526/2022-1/2664-0686.25.

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In the period from 1729 to 1991, two main actors, that is, the USSR and Iran, dominated the Caspian region. However, with the collapse of the USSR and the formation of three new Turkic-speaking states, the number of coastal countries increased to five. This led to the beginning of the struggle for dominance and division of the hydrocarbon resources of the Caspian. This struggle, in which many non-regional actors participated at various levels, especially the United States, EU countries, and China, further increased the geopolitical significance of the Caspian. With the collapse of the bipolar
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Yihdego, Zeray, and Julie Gibson. "Implementing International Watercourses Law through the WEF Nexus and SDGs: an Integrated Approach Illustrated in the Zambezi River Basin." Brill Research Perspectives in International Water Law 5, no. 3 (2020): 3–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/23529369-12340019.

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Abstract International watercourses law, as primarily codified in the UN Watercourses Convention which reflects the basic principles of customary international water law, provides only a broad framework for states to follow. It does not explicitly address the trade-offs of water uses across multiple sectors, such as energy and food, and the interplay between water and sustainable development. These gaps could be filled by turning to policy frameworks such as the Water-Energy-Food Nexus (WEF) and the global development agendas, such as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This monograph ar
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Khan, Mohammad Tanzimuddin. "The Nishorgo Support Project, the Lawachara National Park, and the Chevron seismic survey: forest conservation or energy procurement in Bangladesh?" Journal of Political Ecology 17, no. 1 (2010): 68. http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/v17i1.21700.

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The paper focuses on the operation of a forest conservation project, the USAID-funded Nishorgo Support Project, and its operations in the Lawachhara National Park, Srimangal, Moulvibazar District, Bangladesh. The project has instituted a collaborative management approach. The participants include both state and non-state actors including the Bangladesh Government, the USAID, IUCN, NGOs, and local communities. In 2008 Chevron conducted a seismic survey for natural gas in the National Park, which violated municipal law. This placed the Nishorgo Project in a dilemma over its declared goal of fore
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Angga, La Ode, Rory Jeff Akyuwen, Adonia Ivone Laturette, et al. "Responsibilities of Industry Actors to Environmental Conservation in Coastal Areas." International Journal of Sustainable Development and Planning 16, no. 4 (2021): 651–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.18280/ijsdp.160405.

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The form of responsibility for industry players in maintaining the preservation of coastal areas in Wahai Seram Utara District, Central Maluku Regency based on Law Number 32 of 2009 concerning Environmental Protection and Management (UUPPLH), namely: Forms of state administrative legal accountability, forms of legal accountability civil and criminal legal liability forms.
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Uusikartano, Jarmo, Hannele Väyrynen, and Leena Aarikka-Stenroos. "Public Agency in Changing Industrial Circular Economy Ecosystems: Roles, Modes and Structures." Sustainability 12, no. 23 (2020): 10015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su122310015.

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Value creation in the circular economy (CE) is a result of co-creation. In the industrial context, the theme of collaboration has been studied extensively on a company-to-company basis, but related public agency remains unexplored. Still, circular actions happen in societal contexts where public actors and logics are constantly present, enabling the change toward more sustainable actions. For systematic discovery of the topic, the following research questions are considered: (a) What roles can a public actor have in an industrial CE ecosystem? (b) What are the relationship modes a public actor
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Ratinen, Mari. "Social embeddedness of policy actors. The failure of consumer-owned wind energy in Finland." Energy Policy 128 (May 2019): 735–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.enpol.2019.01.004.

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Giezen, Mendel. "Shifting Infrastructure Landscapes in a Circular Economy: An Institutional Work Analysis of the Water and Energy Sector." Sustainability 10, no. 10 (2018): 3487. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su10103487.

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Under pressure by the transition towards a circular economy, the infrastructure landscape is changing. Using Institutional Work as an analytical lens, this article analyses the work actors do to change and adapt institutional structures. In this process of restructuring, the research shows that there are four dominant types of institutional work: Enabling, Constructing Identities, Constructing Normative Networks, and Changing Normative Associations. The increasing fragmentation of infrastructure as well as the increasing connections made between different flows forces organisations to readjust
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Zahran, Yehia, Hazem S. Kassem, Shimaa M. Naba, and Bader Alhafi Alotaibi. "Shifting from Fragmentation to Integration: A Proposed Framework for Strengthening Agricultural Knowledge and Innovation System in Egypt." Sustainability 12, no. 12 (2020): 5131. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12125131.

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Agricultural knowledge and innovation system (AKIS) has a strong potential to enhance economic performance of farming and contribute to agricultural sustainability, as it may increase synergies and complementarity among actors. This paper is aimed to develop a proposed framework to strengthen AKIS in the study area based on the results of this study. This paper explores perception and views about strengthening AKIS in Dakhalia governorate of Egypt by applying a multi-actor approach. Quantitative and qualitative data were collected through face-to-face interviews and focus group discussion. Thi
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