胸闷气短是什么病| 扁桃体发炎吃什么药好得快| 皮蛋为什么含铅| 巧夺天工什么意思| 端午节干什么| 嗓子突然哑了是什么原因引起的| 吃饭恶心是什么原因| 麦昆牌子是什么档次| 补脾吃什么食物最好| 总想小便是什么原因| 离婚都需要什么| 腹泻吃什么好| 自身免疫性肝病是什么意思| 吃绿豆有什么好处| 口腔溃疡什么时候能好| 1号来月经什么时候是排卵期| 什么植物好养又适合放在室内| 排酸肉是什么意思| 男孩叫什么名字| 焖子是什么做的| 葛根在农村叫什么| hr是什么意思| 头发干燥是什么原因| 睡不着挂什么科| 淞字五行属什么| 梦见自己开车是什么意思| 吃什么降尿酸最有效| 农历10月份是什么星座| 妥协是什么意思| 甲醛是什么味道| 天网是什么意思| 半夏微凉是什么意思| 寒碜是什么意思| 李逵的绰号是什么| 卤米松软膏主治什么| 领结婚证需要带什么材料| 盐酸多西环素片治什么病| 荨麻疹打什么针| 恶心想吐肚子疼是什么原因| 人性是什么| 倒灌是什么意思| 降压药什么时间吃最好| 什么叫cd| 伤口发炎化脓用什么药| 大便干结吃什么药| 关帝是什么神| 随餐服用是什么时候吃| 口舌是什么意思| 抗血小板是什么意思| 属羊是什么星座| 什么争鸣成语| 蕾字五行属什么| 宠物蛇吃什么食物| 公积金缴存基数是什么| 狭隘是什么意思| 直接胆红素偏低是什么原因| 戴银镯子对身体有什么好处| 肠系膜淋巴结炎吃什么药最有效| 007什么意思| 遗物是什么意思| 人外是什么意思| 血色素低吃什么补得快| 犒赏是什么意思| 肺部纹理增粗是什么意思| 六神无主是什么意思| 为什么水不能燃烧| 舟山念什么| 失恋什么意思| 理数是什么意思| 孤单是什么意思| 人为什么会咳嗽| 肌酐高是什么问题| 代发是什么意思| 淋巴结肿大用什么药| 牙龈萎缩用什么牙膏好| 文采是什么意思| 9.15是什么星座| 胸口出汗是什么原因| 女龙配什么属相最好| 很困但是睡不着是什么原因| 如果怀孕了会有什么预兆| 线束是什么意思| 前卫是什么意思| 冠脉硬化什么意思| n字鞋子是什么牌子| 咽鼓管炎吃什么药| 63岁属什么生肖| 螃蟹吐泡泡是什么原因| 手上的月牙代表什么意思| 送人梳子的寓意是什么| 尿潜血1十是什么原因| 血小板计数偏高是什么原因| 心衰病人吃什么食物好| 6月份种什么菜| 复刻是什么意思| Lady什么意思| 济公叫什么名字| dr是什么检查项目| uspoloassn是什么牌子| 心如所愿的意思是什么| 肠胃炎看什么科| 鲐背之年是什么意思| 手上长疣是什么原因造成的| 糖尿病不能吃什么水果| 急性肠胃炎有什么症状| 假体隆胸什么材料好| 扁桃体肥大是什么原因造成的| 玉米的种子是什么| 闭经和绝经有什么区别| 脑萎缩是什么意思| 浑身发热是什么原因| 吃虾不能吃什么水果| 为什么生理期不能做| 秋字五行属什么| 血虚吃什么中成药| 一个山一个见读什么| 冰箱为什么结冰| cos什么意思| 什么是全麦面粉| 喝酒脸红是缺少什么酶| 什么叫八卦| 5月6号是什么星座| 做b超憋尿要憋到什么程度| 补钙吃什么食物最好最快中老年| prada是什么牌子| 蟑螂喜欢什么样的环境| 什么羽毛球拍最好| 高压是什么意思| value是什么意思| 排长是什么军衔| 天蝎座是什么性格| 消炎药有什么| bg是什么意思| asp是什么氨基酸| 碱性磷酸酶偏低是什么原因| 梦见做手术是什么意思| cos是什么意思| 女人吃鹅蛋有什么好处| 乳酸阈值是什么意思| 浑身没劲挂什么科| 为什么要来月经| 03属什么生肖| 洁颜蜜是什么| 过刚易折什么意思| 嘴涩是什么原因造成的| 茉莉花什么时候开花| 左后背发麻是什么原因| 老流口水是什么原因| 银子有什么功效与作用| 洋葱吃多了有什么坏处| 乌豆是什么| no2是什么| 什么是苔藓皮肤病| 舒俱来是什么宝石| 什么药可以延长时间| 赵雅芝是什么脸型| 癫痫属于什么科| 虎父无犬子是什么意思| 高铁与动车的区别是什么| 龟代表什么生肖| 冠脉造影是什么意思| 梦见小男孩是什么预兆| 小孩睡觉打呼噜是什么原因| 白色和什么颜色搭配最好看| 宝宝体检挂什么科| 什么山什么水| 胃功能四项检查是什么| 致意是什么意思| 分泌物是什么| 吃什么升白细胞| 缺氧是什么症状| 脊椎炎什么症状| 三十三天都是什么天| 3什么意思| 主见是什么意思| 什么食物含叶酸多| 肠息肉是什么症状| 水痘疫苗第二针什么时候打| 善莫大焉是什么意思| 软组织损伤是什么意思| 大便次数少是什么原因| 百什么争鸣成语| 贤惠是什么意思| 为什么一直放屁| 见字五行属什么| 可可粉是什么| 废话是什么意思| 横死是什么意思| 四肢肿胀是什么原因引起的| 什么时候验孕最准确| 额头和下巴长痘痘是什么原因| 出汗有什么好处| 女人小便出血是什么原因| 吝啬鬼是什么生肖| 吃什么能降铁蛋白| 天经地义是什么意思| 冰镇情人果是什么水果| 6月15是什么星座| 不爱说话的人是什么性格| 缺钾吃什么补| hrs是什么意思| 辣条是什么做的| 手脚软无力是什么原因引起的| 世界上什么动物牙齿最多| 七月初七是什么节| 下丘脑分泌什么激素| 中老年吃什么钙片比较好| 河豚为什么有毒| 高血压是什么原因引起的| 眼睛干涩用什么眼药水好| 钠是什么意思| 翡翠都有什么颜色| 36计的第一计是什么| 奇葩什么意思| 月经期喝红糖水有什么好处| 什么症状需要做膀胱镜| 英文为什么怎么写| rog是什么牌子| penguin是什么意思| 什么是处男| 为什么肚子疼| 出汗有异味是什么原因| 小鬼是什么意思| 白眼球发黄是什么原因| 田五行属性是什么| 脸上发麻是什么原因| 冰是什么意思| 便秘吃什么药效果好| 藜麦是什么| 肛周瘙痒是什么原因| 朝鲜说什么语言| 心颤吃什么药效果好| 四大皆空是什么生肖| 鼻炎是什么症状| 屎壳郎是什么意思| 孕妇梦见坟墓是什么预兆| 浩浩荡荡是什么意思| 乳头发黑是什么原因| 炖汤用什么锅比较好| 支气管激发试验阴性是什么意思| 一什么地| 九八年属什么生肖| 鞋底md是什么材质| 抚琴是什么意思| 什么奔什么走| 6月6日是什么日子| 头疼恶心想吐是什么原因| 带状疱疹不能吃什么东西| 秦昊的父母是干什么的| 单字五行属什么| 玄色是什么颜色| 来例假腰疼是什么原因| 咖色搭配什么颜色好看| 乳腺应该挂什么科| 为什么胃酸会分泌过多| 尿隐血十一是什么意思| 包皮过长挂什么科| 窍门是什么意思| 生理期不能吃什么水果| 肿瘤标志物cA724高说明什么| 物欲横流是什么意思| 脑血管堵塞吃什么药最好| 尿痛吃什么药效果最好| 前列腺在哪里男人的什么部位| 百度

丽水市莲都区现代农业园区管委会主任 陈金奎

百度 镜头前的米卢,和镜头外的米卢,会有着一些差别。

Network governance is "interfirm coordination that is characterized by organic or informal social system, in contrast to bureaucratic structures within firms and formal relationships between them.[1] The concepts of privatization, public private partnership, and contracting are defined in this context." Network governance constitutes a "distinct form of coordinating economic activity" (Powell, 1990:301) which contrasts and competes with markets and hierarchies.[2]

Definition

edit

Network governance involves a select, persistent, and structured set of autonomous firms (as well as nonprofit agencies) engaged in creating products or services based on implicit and open-ended contracts adapt to environmental contingencies and to coordinate and safeguard ex-changes. These contracts are socially—not legally—binding. As such, governance networks distinguish themselves from the hierarchical control of the state and the competitive regulation of the market in at least three ways:[3]

  1. In terms of the relationship between the actors, governance networks can be described as a pluricentric system as opposed to the unicentric system.[4] Governance networks involve a large number of interdependent actors who interact with each other in order to produce an outcome.[3]
  2. In terms of decision-making, governance networks are based on negotiation rationality as opposed to the substantial rationality that governs state rule and the procedural rationality that governs market competition.[5]
  3. Compliance is ensured through trust and political obligation which, over time, becomes sustained by self-constituted rules and norms.[6]

As a concept, network governance explains increased efficiency and reduced agency problems for organizations existing in highly turbulent environments. On the one hand, the efficiency is enhanced through distributed knowledge acquisition and decentralised problem-solving; on the other, the effectiveness is improved through the emergence of collective solutions to global problems in different self-regulated sectors of activity.[2] Due to the rapid pace of modern society and competitive pressures from globalization, transnational network governance has gained prominence.[7]

Network governance first depends on the comprehension of the short- and long-term global business risks. It is based on the definition of the IT key objectives and their influence on the network. It includes the negotiation of the satisfaction criteria for the business lines and integrates processes for the measurement and improvement of the global efficiency and end user satisfaction. Beyond that, it allows the constitution and piloting of internal teams and external partners as well as the setting up of a control system enabling to validate the performance of the whole. Finally, it ensures permanent communication at all the various management levels.

In the public sector, network governance is not universally accepted as a positive development by all public administration scholars. Some doubt its ability to adequately perform as a democratic governance structure while others view it as phenomenon that promotes efficient and effective delivery of public goods and services. Examining managed networks in health care, Ferlie and colleagues[8][9] suggest that networks may be the 'least bad' form of governance addressing wicked problems, such as providing health care for the increasing number of older people.

Types

edit

Provan and Kenis categorize network governance forms along two different dimensions:[10]

  • Network governance may or may not be brokered. They refer to a network whose organizations interact with every other organization to decentralizedly govern the network "shared governance". At the other extreme a network may be highly brokered via centralized network brokers with only few and limited direct organization-to-organization interactions.
  • Network may be participant governed or externally governed.

Participant-governed networks

edit

In participant governance a network is governed by its members themselves.

They call such networks that involve most or all network members interacting on a relatively equal basis in the process of governance "shared participant governance".

Lead organization-governed networks

edit

More centralized networks may be governed by and through a lead organization that is a network member.

Historical and modern examples of network governance

edit
  • From the 10th to 13th centuries, merchants in Cairo begin forming a network of merchants that report to each other the intents and information on agents working for them, and collectively inflict sanctions on agents that perform poorly. This leads to a hub of trading formed in Cairo and Aden – this makes the information on the market conditions, and the reputation of various agents easier to access for the good of the whole.[11]
  • By the 12th century, Venice provides its merchants with an improved flow of information regarding the market conditions they face, as well as information on the practices of individual agents. This recording of information helps merchants make more informed business decisions.[11]
  • The formation of the English and Dutch East India Companies forms a cooperation between merchants and companies to better regulate and inform others on the reputations of trading actors in London, Amsterdam and ports in East Africa and Arabia. This is a collective movement by governments and companies to raise capital for both the country and businesses.[11]

These examples show how network governance worked in the eras of increased trade and cooperation between merchants and nations ranging from the 10th century to the 17th century. Ron Harris, in his article "Reputation at the Birth of Corporate Governance", writes: "The questions of who had a good reputation and who had a bad one, whom one could trust and entrust money to, were unaltered, but the relationships to which they applied changed, as did the institutions that provided answers to these questions."[12]

  • Amber Alert – In 1996 the Amber Alert system was established in the United States after nine-year-old Amber Hagerman was kidnapped and murdered in Arlington, Texas. Media networks, in collaboration with law enforcement, joined a grassroots movement to spread the cause in establishing a network to aid in broadcasting alerts in an effort to prevent future crimes. This movement has grown to include all fifty states, and spread alerts across state lines. The Amber Alert system has since been widely accepted as the first-response program for missing persons nationwide.[13]
  • Homeland Security Fusion Centers – After the September 11th attacks, the United States endeavoured to improve the coordination between national and local organizations concerned with security. The Department of Homeland Security and a Director of National Intelligence were implemented at the federal level in response to this problem. Soon after, states began creating their own networks to share information pertinent to homeland security. As a result, fusion centers have popped up in almost every state, as well as many regions. These fusion centers provide a hub for law enforcement agencies to collaborate on national security measures in an effort to promote transparency across agencies, whether it be at the state, local or federal level.[13]

Importance of governmental relations

edit

Relationships among governing positions and governing institutions are absolutely vital for the success of the internal workings of the governments that aid the public. While federal, state, and local governments differ in their policies, they all work in coherence in order for the foundations to work efficiently.[14] "Checks and balances" is a prime synonym when referring to intergovernmental relations. All participating parties of the government must adhere to specific guidelines in order to cultivate a fair and even playing field that is both beneficial and just to the population it affects.[9] A primary principal in governmental relationships is the balance of power between the parties.[15] The federal government has a large amount of control in terms of national security, national finances and foreign affairs. However, in order to balance that control, state-level governments have a significant voice in intrastate politics.[16] Specific examples of state-level policies include topics such as state highways, borderlines, and state parks. This allows states to still have flexibility while bonding to national policy.

Unfortunately, creating relationships among different level governments and government agencies is a complicated, and often grueling process.[17] However, many agencies make deals or compromise within the party in order to further benefit both institutions. For example, a state may fund a county in order to better the county roads because it could be a direct reflection of the state. Intra-governmental relations between agencies, state-level, local-level, and federal-level government must work together in order to prosper and create policies or laws that are beneficial to both the agencies and the public.[18]

Role in environmental governance

edit

In the wake of apparent failures to govern complex environmental problems by the central state, "new" modes of governance have been proposed in recent years.[16] Network governance is the mode most commonly associated with the concept of governance, in which autonomous stakeholders work together to achieve common goals.

The emergence of network governance can be characterised by an attempt to take into account the increasing importance of non-governmental organizations (NGOs), the private sector, scientific networks and international institutions in the performance of various functions of governance.[19] Embedding interventions to make society better and to transform conflicts within "relational webs"[20] can ensure better coordination with existing initiatives and institutions[21] and greater local acceptance and buy-in, which makes the intervention more sustainable.[22] Prominent examples of such networks that have been instrumental in forming successful working arrangements are the World Commission on Dams, the Global Environmental Facility and the flexible mechanism of the Kyoto Protocol.[23] Another ongoing effort is the United Nations Global Compact, which combines multiple stakeholders in a trilateral construction including representatives from governments, private sector and the NGO community.[24]:?6?

One main reason for the proliferation of network approaches in environmental governance is their potential to integrate and make available different sources of knowledge and competences and to encourage individual and collective learning.[2][24] Currently, environmental governance faces various challenges that are characterised by complexities and uncertainties inherent to environmental and sustainable problems.[25] Network governance can provide a means to address these governance problems by institutionalising learning on facts and deliberation on value judgements.[26] For example, in the realm of global chemical safety, transnational networks have formed around initiatives by international organisations and successfully developed rules for addressing global chemical issues, many of which have been implemented by national legislations. Most notably, these transnational networks made it possible to avoid the institutional apathy that is typically found in political settings with many actors of conflicting interests, especially on a global level.[18]

Through integration of actors from different sectors, governance networks are able to provide an innovative environment of learning, laying the way for adaptive and effective governance.[2] One particular form of networks important to governance problems is epistemic communities in which actors share the same basic casual beliefs and normative values.[17]:?3? Although participation in these epistemic communities requires an interest in the problem at stake, the actors involved do not necessarily share the same interest. In general, the interests are interdependent but can also be different or sometimes contesting, stressing the need for consensus building and the development of cognitive commodities.[16]:?26?

The main argument in the literature for the advantage of network governance over traditional command and control regulation or, alternatively, recourse to market regulation, is its capacity to deal with situations of intrinsic uncertainty and decision-making under bounded rationality.[24] This is typically the case in the field of global environmental governance where one has to deal with complex and interrelated problems. In these situations, network institutions can create a synergy between different competences and sources of knowledge allowing dealing with complex and interlined problems.[2]

Enhancement of corporate social responsibility

edit

As increasing amounts of scientific data validate concerns about the deterioration of our environment, the role of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in network governance is being utilized in ever-increasing ways to halt or at least slow this deterioration. One of the ways they are accomplishing this is by directing their activities to focus on improving corporate social responsibility (CSR). As a concept, CSR has existed since the first business was formed in civilization. The French philosopher Rousseau described it as the "social contract" between business and society.[27] As theories about CSR have evolved in keeping with their times, today it is increasingly associated with sustainable practices and development, meaning that businesses have a "moral responsibility" to conduct their operations in an ecologically sustainable manner.[28] It is no longer acceptable for corporations just to grow "the bottom line" and increase profits for their shareholders. Businesses remain free to pursue profits but are increasingly obligated to minimize their negative impact on the environment.[28]

Network governance, in the form of NGOs, is effectively bringing to light "bad practices" by corporations, as well as highlighting those actively working to reduce their carbon footprints. Private governance networks such as CSRHUB and the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) are entities that hold corporations accountable for their amount of corporate social responsibility. Founded to accelerate solutions to climate change and water management, the CDP discloses information and data on water management, greenhouse gas emissions, and climate change strategies on over 3,000 companies worldwide.[29] It is the only global climate change reporting system and encourages corporations to engage in "best practices" regarding environmental impact by making their formerly private or unknown environmental impact information available to anyone, including the general public. This information can be used (by a variety of entities) to make consumer purchase and investment decisions, formulate governmental as well as corporate policy, educate people, develop less harmful business methods for corporations and formulate action plans by environmental advocacy groups, to name a few. Lord Adair Turner, Chairman of the UK Financial Services Authority, explains how network governance enhances CSR: "The first step towards managing carbon emissions is to measure them because in business what gets measured gets managed. The Carbon Disclosure Project has played a crucial role in encouraging companies to take the first steps in that measurement and management path".[30]

Leading European business schools joined with more than sixty multinationals to launch the Academy of Business in Society, the mission of which is to push CSR to the forefront of business practice. Their main activities in pursuing this goal are: 1) developing 'best-in-class' training practices and learning resources for businesses and corporate academies, 2) including the changing role of business in society in business education and 3) creating a global research bank on the role of business in society and delivering interdisciplinary research on CSR.[28] This is an example of network governance using education to improve corporate social responsibility. Use of organization of networks in today's society is a valid means of moving forward in preserving the environment.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Jones, Candace; Hesterly, William S.; Borgatti, Stephen P. (October 1997). "A general theory of network governance: exchange conditions and social mechanisms". Academy of Management Review. 22 (4): 911–945. doi:10.5465/AMR.1997.9711022109. JSTOR 259249. S2CID 1446183.
  2. ^ a b c d e Dedeurwaerdere, Tom (2007), "The contribution of network governance to sustainability impact assessment", in Thoyer, Sophie; Martimort-Asso, Beno?t (eds.), Participation for sustainability in trade, Aldershot, England Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate, pp. 209–228, ISBN 9780754683445.
  3. ^ a b S?rensen, Eva; Torfing, Jacob (September 2005). "The democratic anchorage of governance networks". Scandinavian Political Studies. 28 (3): 195–218. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9477.2005.00129.x.
  4. ^ Van Kersbergen, Kees; Van Waarden, Frans (March 2004). "'Governance' as a bridge between disciplines: cross-disciplinary inspiration regarding shifts in governance and problems of governability, accountability and legitimacy". European Journal of Political Research. 43 (2): 151. doi:10.1111/j.1475-6765.2004.00149.x. hdl:1871/33908. S2CID 55291750.
  5. ^ Scharpf, Fritz (1997). "Actor-centered institutionalism". In Scharpf, Fritz (ed.). Games real actors play actor-centered institutionalism in policy research. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press. p. 46. ISBN 9780813399683.
  6. ^ Nielsen, Klaus; Pedersen, Ove K. (June 1998). "The negotiated economy: ideal and history". Scandinavian Political Studies. 11 (2): 79–101. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9477.1988.tb00361.x. Text. Archived 7 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Stone, Diane. Knowledge actors and transnational governance: The private-public policy nexus in the global agora. Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.
  8. ^ Ferlie, Ewan; Fitzgerald, Louise; McGivern, Gerry; Dopson, Sue; Bennett, Chris (2013). Making wicked problems governable? The case of managed networks in health care. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9781299441927.
  9. ^ a b Ferlie, Ewan; Fitzgerald, Louise; McGivern, Gerry; Dopson, Sue; Bennett, Chris (June 2011). "Public policy networks and 'wicked problems': a nascent solution?". Public Administration. 89 (2): 307–324. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9299.2010.01896.x. Pdf. Archived 2 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ Provan, Keith G.; Kenis, Patrick (1 April 2008). "Modes of Network Governance: Structure, Management, and Effectiveness" (PDF). Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory. 18 (2): 229–252. doi:10.1093/jopart/mum015. ISSN 1053-1858.
  11. ^ a b c "Business History Review". journals.cambridge.org. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  12. ^ Balleisen, Edward J.; Clarke, Sally; Karpoff, Jonathan M.; Macey, Jonathan; Harris, Ron; Chapin, Christy Ford (2013), "Corporate Reputation Roundtable", Business History Review, 87 (4): 639, doi:10.1017/S0007680513001062, hdl:11603/29765, ISSN 0007-6805
  13. ^ a b Manna, Paul (June 2010). "Network Governance in Three Policy Areas with Implications for the Common Core State Standards Initiative". Thomas B. Fordham Institute.
  14. ^ Jones, Candace; Hesterly, William S.; Borgatti, Stephen P. (1997). "A General Theory of Network Governance: Exchange Conditions and Social Mechanisms". The Academy of Management Review. 22 (4): 911–945. doi:10.5465/amr.1997.9711022109. JSTOR 259249. S2CID 1446183.
  15. ^ Forrer. Governing cross-sector collaboration. San Francisco, CA : Jossey-Bass, [2014].
  16. ^ a b c Newig, Jens; Günther, Dirk; Pahl-Wostl, Claudia (2010). "Synapses in the network: learning in governance networks in the context of environmental management". Ecology and Society. 15 (4). doi:10.5751/ES-03713-150424. hdl:10535/7432. article 24.
  17. ^ a b Haas, Peter M. (1997), "Introduction: epistemic communities and international policy coordination", in Haas, Peter M. (ed.), Knowledge, power, and international policy coordination, Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press, pp. 1–35, ISBN 9781570031755.
  18. ^ a b Warning, Michael (2006), "Transnational bureaucracy networks: a resource of global environmental governance?", in Winter, Gerd (ed.), Multilevel governance of global environmental change: perspectives from science, sociology and the law, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 305–329, ISBN 9780521173438. [e-book] URL: Details.
  19. ^ Dedeurwaerdere, T. 2005. The contribution of network governance to sustainable development.
  20. ^ Paul., Lederach, John (2010). The moral imagination : the art and soul of building peace. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199747580. OCLC 653082476.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  21. ^ "Networked governance in Ecuador's border regions | Forced Migration Review". fmreview.org. Archived from the original on 28 July 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  22. ^ Pugh, Jeffrey D. (1 September 2016). "Peacebuilding Among Transnational Youth in Migrant-Receiving Border Regions of Ecuador". Journal of Peacebuilding & Development. 11 (3): 83–97. doi:10.1080/15423166.2016.1222591. ISSN 1542-3166. S2CID 157869073.
  23. ^ Streck, Charlotte (2002), "Global public policy networks as coalitions for change", in Esty, Daniel C.; Ivanova, Maria H. (eds.), Global environmental governance: options & opportunities, New Haven, Connecticut: Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies, pp. 121–140, ISBN 9780970788221.
  24. ^ a b c Haas, Peter M. (November 2004). "Addressing the global governance deficit". Global Environmental Politics. 4 (4): 1–15. doi:10.1162/glep.2004.4.4.1. hdl:1811/31977. S2CID 57565445.
  25. ^ Newig, Jens; Vo?, Jan-Peter; Monstadt, Jochen (2008). Governance for sustainable development: coping with ambivalence, uncertainty and distributed power. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415451925.
  26. ^ Palm, Brian W. (November 2008). "Assessing network-based collaborations: effectiveness for whom?". Public Management Review. 10 (6): 733–749. doi:10.1080/14719030802423087. S2CID 152404887.
  27. ^ Rousseau, Jean-Jacques. The New Encyclop?dia Britannica, Vol 26. Chicago. pp. 938–942. ISBN 9780852297872.
  28. ^ a b c Bichta, Constantina (2003). Corporate social responsibility: a role in government policy and regulation? (PDF). Bath: University of Bath, School of Management. OCLC 53860209. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 February 2016. Research report no. 16.
  29. ^ "Carbon Disclosure Project, CDP What We Do Online". Archived from the original on 3 November 2011. Retrieved 9 November 2011. [Not dated.]
  30. ^ "Synergy Carbon, Carbon Strategy Services Online". 2006. Archived from the original on 2 April 2010. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
胸下面是什么部位 空腹喝啤酒有什么危害 雷锋原名叫什么 做蛋糕需要什么食材 椰子不能和什么一起吃
乘务长是干什么的 nsfw是什么意思 双肾囊肿有什么危害 喉咙里老是有痰是什么原因 六月十一号是什么星座
08属什么生肖 属牛的五行属性是什么 香干炒什么菜好吃 容易早醒是什么原因 今年27岁属什么生肖
五十肩是什么意思 为什么人要喝水 外痔疼痛用什么药最好 蜘蛛吃什么 斐乐手表属于什么档次
试管什么降调hcv9jop1ns8r.cn 吃石斛有什么好处hcv8jop4ns1r.cn 很会放屁是什么原因hcv9jop5ns1r.cn 吃榴莲不能和什么一起吃hcv8jop6ns1r.cn 胎盘2级是什么意思hcv8jop9ns6r.cn
相处是什么意思hcv9jop6ns7r.cn 胃反酸烧心吃什么药hcv9jop3ns0r.cn 爱是个什么东西hcv8jop0ns1r.cn 甘露醇是什么药hcv9jop1ns6r.cn 舌头咬破了用什么药hcv8jop2ns8r.cn
天庭的动物是什么生肖hcv9jop3ns4r.cn 晖字五行属什么xinjiangjialails.com 晚饭吃什么最健康hcv8jop0ns3r.cn 跟腱是什么hcv9jop4ns1r.cn 什么冰冰hcv7jop4ns8r.cn
龟苓膏的原料是什么hcv9jop3ns5r.cn 父亲节应该送什么travellingsim.com 胃食管反流有什么症状adwl56.com 胃疼去医院挂什么科hcv9jop0ns1r.cn 农历闰六月有什么讲究hcv8jop9ns2r.cn
百度