Steven Bernstein mainly investigates Environmental governance, Public relations, Global governance, Legitimacy and State. His Environmental governance research includes themes of Tragedy, Sustainable development, Mainstream and Public administration. His work in the fields of Public administration, such as Policy analysis, intersects with other areas such as Work.
The study incorporates disciplines such as Public economics and Sustainable forest management in addition to Public relations. The concepts of his Legitimacy study are interwoven with issues in Goods and services, Corporate social responsibility and Process. His State study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Economic system and Domestic policy.
His scientific interests lie mostly in Public administration, Global governance, Economic system, Political economy and Politics. His Public administration research incorporates elements of Environmental governance and Sustainable development. His Environmental governance study incorporates themes from Environmental resource management and Environmentalism.
His Global governance research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Legitimacy and Scholarship. His work deals with themes such as Supply chain, Project governance and Public relations, which intersect with Legitimacy. His work carried out in the field of Economic system brings together such families of science as Globalization, Climate governance, State, Collective action and Power.
His primary areas of study are Politics, Economic system, Public administration, Global governance and Political economy. Particularly relevant to Legitimacy is his body of work in Politics. His research on Economic system also deals with topics like
His research in Public administration focuses on subjects like Sustainable development, which are connected to Economic growth. His research integrates issues of Stakeholder, Project governance, Scholarship and Process management in his study of Global governance. As part of the same scientific family, Steven Bernstein usually focuses on Political economy, concentrating on Environmental politics and intersecting with Great power and Face.
The scientist’s investigation covers issues in Economic system, Politics, Climate governance, Collective action and Public administration. His Economic system research integrates issues from Global warming, Capacity building and State. The Politics study combines topics in areas such as Scrutiny, Public relations and Mandate.
He combines subjects such as Accountability, Environmental resource management and Comparative advantage with his study of Climate governance. His Collective action study combines topics in areas such as International community and Interdependence. His Public administration research includes elements of Project governance, Best practice, Polycentricity, Global governance and Legitimacy.
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Overcoming the tragedy of super wicked problems: constraining our future selves to ameliorate global climate change
Kelly Levin;Benjamin Cashore;Steven Bernstein;Graeme Auld.
(2012)
Can non-state global governance be legitimate? An analytical framework
Steven Bernstein;Benjamin Cashore.
(2007)
The Compromise of Liberal Environmentalism
Steven Franklin Bernstein.
(2001)
The New Corporate Social Responsibility
Graeme Auld;Steven Bernstein;Benjamin Cashore.
(2008)
Navigating the Anthropocene: Improving Earth System Governance
F. Biermann;F. Biermann;K. Abbott;S. Andresen;Karin Bäckstrand.
(2012)
Legitimacy in intergovernmental and non-state global governance
Steven Bernstein.
Review of International Political Economy (2011)
Complex global governance and domestic policies: four pathways of influence
Steven Bernstein;Benjamin Cashore.
(2012)
Globalization, Four Paths of Internationalization and Domestic Policy Change: The Case of EcoForestry in British Columbia, Canada
Steven Bernstein;Benjamin Cashore.
(2000)
God Gave Physics the Easy Problems: Adapting Social Science to an Unpredictable World
Steven Bernstein;Richard Ned Lebow;Janice Gross Stein;Steven Weber.
European Journal of International Relations (2000)
Can Non-state Governance ‘Ratchet Up’ Global Environmental Standards? Lessons from the Forest Sector
Benjamin Cashore;Graeme Auld;Steven Bernstein;Constance McDermott.
(2007)
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