Transnational Climate Governance and the Global 500

Hsueh gave a talk on her latest research titled, “Transnational Climate Governance and the Global 500” at the ASU Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability (GIOS) on December 1, coinciding with the second day of the UN climate talks (COP21) in Paris.

As a public policy scholar and economist, Lily Hsueh’s research centers on how economics and politics interact, and how markets, institutions, governments, businesses, and other stakeholders play mediating roles in influencing and shaping the emergence, evolution, and impacts of alternative governance systems (i.e., voluntary, market-based, and hybrid forms of governance) in environmental and natural resource policy and management. In Fall 2015, Lily Hsueh focused her efforts on research projects that examined the emergence and efficacy of catch shares (cap and trade policies) in ocean and marine resources and industry self-regulation and private governance, more generally, in global climate change.