BulkeleyHEdwardsGASFullerS (2014) Contesting climate justice in the city: Examining politics and practice in urban climate change experiments. Global Environmental Change25: 31–40.
3.
BullH (1977) The Anarchical Society: A Study of Order in World Politics. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
4.
ChanN (2016) Climate contributions and the Paris agreement: Fairness and equity in a bottom-up architecture. Ethics & International Affairs30(3): 291–301.
5.
FalknerR (2016) The Paris agreement and the new logic of international climate politics. International Affairs92(5): 1107–1125.
6.
FalknerR (2017) International climate politics between pluralism and solidarism: An English school perspective. In: StevensonHCorryO (eds) Traditions and Trends in Global Environmental Politics: International Relations and the Earth. London: Routledge, pp.26–44.
7.
FalknerRBuzanB (2017) The emergence of environmental stewardship as a primary institution in global international society. European Journal of International Relations. Epub ahead of print 1 December. DOI: 10.1177/1354066117741948.
8.
FrumhoffPCHeedeROreskesN (2015) The climate responsibilities of industrial carbon producers. Climatic Change132(2): 157–171.
9.
GardinerSM (2011) A Perfect Moral Storm: The Ethical Tragedy of Climate Change. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
10.
GuptaJ (2014) The History of Global Climate Governance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
11.
HaleTRogerC (2014) Orchestration and transnational climate governance. The Review of International Organizations9(1): 59–82.
12.
HochstetlerKMilkoreitM (2014) Emerging powers in the climate negotiations: Shifting identity conceptions. Political Research Quarterly67(1): 224–235.
13.
HurrellA (2003) Order and justice: What is at stake? In: FootRGaddisJHurrellA (eds) Order and Justice in International Relations. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.24–48.
14.
HurrellASenguptaS (2012) Emerging powers, North-South relations and global climate politics. International Affairs88(3): 463–484.
15.
OkerekeCCoventryP (2016) Climate justice and the international regime: Before, during, and after Paris. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change7(6): 834–851.
16.
PickeringJVanderheidenSMillerS (2012) “If Equity’s In, We’re Out”: Scope for fairness in the next global climate agreement. Ethics & International Affairs26(4): 423–443.
17.
PottierAAMéjeanOGodardJ-Cet al. (2017) A survey of global climate justice: From negotiation stances to moral stakes and back. International Review of Environmental and Resource Economics11(1): 1–53.
18.
RajamaniL (2012) The changing fortunes of differential treatment in the evolution of international environmental law. International Affairs88(3): 605–623.
19.
Reus-SmitCSnidalD (2008) Reuniting ethics and social science: The Oxford handbook of international relations. Ethics & International Affairs22(3): 261–271.
20.
ShueH (1992) The unavoidability of justice. In: HurrellAKingsburyB (eds) The International Politics of the Environment: Actors, Interests, and Institutions. Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp.373–397.
21.
ShueH (1993) Subsistence emissions and luxury emissions. Law & Policy15(1): 39–60.
22.
ShueH (2011) Face reality? After you! A call for leadership on climate change. Ethics & International Affairs25(1): 17–26.
23.
ShueH (2014) Climate Justice: Vulnerability and Protection. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
24.
ShueH (2019) Subsistence protection and mitigation ambition: Necessities, economic and climatic. British Journal of Politics and International Relations. Epub ahead of print. DOI: 10.1177/1369148118819071.
25.
VanhalaLHestbaekC (2016) Framing climate change loss and damage in UNFCCC negotiations. Global Environmental Politics16(4): 111–129.