Political Economy of Low Carbon Investment in China and India
This project investigates whether and how coalitions of public, private and civic actors influence low carbon investment.
Showing 1–10 of 12 results
This project investigates whether and how coalitions of public, private and civic actors influence low carbon investment.
At the heart of green industrial policy is rent management: government creating and withdrawing opportunities for highly profitable investment. This project asks what the key factors are for rent management to succeed.
This project is looking into the heart of the electricity supply crisis in sub-Saharan Africa.
Our work looks at the role of public-private-civic alliances as drivers of the green transformation, in particular at the role of business in such alignments.
Mitigating climate change requires technological innovation. This project analyses the innovation paths pursued in Europe and Asia.
This project was concerned with the political economy analysis of climate change policies. The central question of the project was who drives/obstructs climate change policies in the rising powers, paying special attention to renewable energy policies.
While the debate on industrial clusters and local innovation systems was mainly concerned with local linkages, this work examined global linkages and how they affected local relationships.
Two transformations are likely to dominate the first half of the twenty-first century. One is the shift in economic power from the West (North America and Western Europe) to the East (China and the East Asian production system). The second is the transition from a high to low carbon economy.
The question driving this project was how was the 'organisational decomposition of the innovation process' (ODIP) changing the global distribution of innovation activities.
The project explores how transformational thinking on resource management could lead to multiple scenarios in the context of emerging economies with a specific focus on India.