Andrea Joslyn Nightingale

Bilde av Andrea Joslyn Nightingale
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Telefon +47 22855141
Rom 332
Brukernavn
Besøksadresse Moltke Moes vei 31 Harriet Holters hus 0851 Oslo
Postadresse Postboks 1096 Blindern 0317 Oslo

Academic interests

My academic interests span political ecology, socionatures, critical development studies, feminist theory, and methodological work on mixing methods across the social and natural sciences. I feel passionately about theorizing new understandings of the society-environment nexus to account for power and politics within dynamic and unpredictable environmental change. I use in-depth, fieldwork-based studies combined with interdisciplinary theorizing to work with ontological and methodological pluralism.

I focus these passions around three main themes:

(1) Climate change adaptation and transformation in the context of development

(2) Public authority, state formation and collective action

(3) Emotion and subjectivity within environmental governance and commoning

I have worked in Nepal for over thirty years on questions of natural resource management, gender, caste and related environmental justice issues, and state transformation. I have also worked in Scotland on in-shore fisheries management. My most recent work is focused on climate change adaptation and political change and has expanded to include comparative work in Kenya and Nicaragua.

My scholarship has contributed to debates in feminist political ecology on theorising social justice, nature, commoning and environmental governance. I probe how intersectional social relations, including gender, race, caste, class and other axes of social difference (known collectively as intersectional subjectivities) are foundational to which management priorities are considered, who is expected to do what kinds of work to achieve environmental governance and sustainability goals. I am particularly interested in the possibilities for the transformation of inequalities and exclusions as collectives struggles over everyday governance practices.

Courses taught

  • HGO4301 The social dimensions of climate change

My pedagogy is oriented around an experiential, interactive learning philosophy combined with a strong focus on analytical and conceptual learning. I take a student-centred, exploratory and mentoring approach that seeks to help students to recognise and achieve their own potential.

Background

I began my career on sailboats, mountaintops and swamps teaching environmental education to school children and adults in the USA. I interspersed outdoor education with work for the US Forest Service as a Ranger and Fisheries Technician. 
In the mid 1990s, I trained as a geographer at the Department of Geography, University of Minnesota (2001) where I was a MacArthur Fellow in an interdisciplinary global studies training program, and held National Science Foundation Graduate Student awards, and a Fulbright award in Nepal for my research. After finishing my PhD, I held a faculty position as Environmental Geographer at the University of Edinburgh from 2002-2012. From 2012 I joined the University of Gothenburg, Sweden and helped found their Environmental Social Science research program. In 2015 moved to the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences as Chair of Rural Development in the Global South before coming to the University of Oslo in February of 2019.

Research Projects

The Swedish Research Council Sustainability and Resilience award, Governing Climate Resilient Futures: gender, justice and conflict resolution in resource management, is a partnership with Noemi Gonda (SLU), Siri Eriksen (Noragric, Norwegian University of Life Sciences), Hemant R. Ojha  (Institute of Governance and Policy Analysis at University of Canberra and Institute for Studies and Development Worldwide Sydney, Australia), Dil Khatri (Southasia Institute of Advanced Studies, Nepal), Pierre Merlet (Universidad Centroamericana (UCA)-Nitlapa, Nicaragua), Ben Muok (Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology (JOOUST), Kenya). The work explores the possibilities for deliberative learning and transformative pathways towards social and climate justice.
The Swedish Research Council (VR) funded project, “Conflict, Violence and Environmental Change: Investigating resource governance and legitimacy in transitional societies (COVEC)” explores the politics of climate change adaptation in partnership with Siri Eriksen (Noragric, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway), Hemant Ojha (Institute of Governance and Policy Analysis at University of Canberra and Institute for Studies and Development Worldwide Sydney, Australia),  the Southasia Institute for Advanced Studies (SIAS), and Ben Muok (Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology (JOOUST), Kenya). 
Hemant Ojha and I finalized in 2015 our British Academy funded project, “Climate Change and Political Violence? Resource governance and post-conflict reconstruction in Nepal.” The Nepal work was part of a growing collaboration with Ajaya Dixit at the Institute for Social and Environmental Transition-Nepal (ISET-Nepal) and their International Development Research Institute (IDRC), Canada funded Think Tank work. Together we have engaged in policy debates around climate change adaptation and resilience, as well as providing writing workshops for emerging scholars in Nepal. 
WEGO is a European Research Council Marie Skłodowska-Curie Innovative Training Network award on feminist political ecology. One of the two WEGO PhD students is engaged in research in Nepal on state formation and the other on in-shore fisheries organizing in Scotland.
Landscapes of Democracy, is my long term research project in Nepal tracking the political transition through the lens of resource governance. Resource governance is a context wherein struggles over authority and demands for resources and recognition of citizenship rights are particularly acute. This work points to how democracy and good environmental governance are dependent upon each other. 
The Producing Seascapes project was closely linked to my previous research on in-shore fisheries management in Scotland and my interests in subjectivity, emotion and environment. Producing Seascapes probed how the Swedish coastal environment is understood and experienced differently for different people and links this plurality of views to governance challenges. The case study focused on the northwestern coast of Sweden in the area around Strömstad in collaboration with Ruth Brennan (Trinity Centre for Environmental Humanities, Trinity College, Dublin and Scottish Association for Marine Science), Stephen Hurrel (independent artist).
 

Awards

  • 2019-2022    Swedish Research Council (VR) Sustainability and Resilience grant, Governing Climate Resilient Futures: gender, justice and conflict resolution in resource management, Lead investigator with Dr. Noemi Gonda (SLU), Dr. Siri Eriksen (Noragric, Norwegian University of Life Sciences), Dr. Hemant R. Ojha (University of Canberra), Dr. Dil Khatri (Southasia Institute of Advanced Studies, Nepal), Mr. Pierre Merlet (Universidad Centroamericana (UCA)-Nitlapa, Nicaragua), and Dr. Ben Muok (Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology (JOOUST), Kenya).

  • 2019-2021     EU Horizon 2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Innovative Training Network award, Wellbeing, Ecology, Gender, and cOmmunity (WEGO), University of Oslo collaborator with lead Dr. Wendy Harcourt (ISS, The Hague, and 20 international collaborators).

  • 2018    Riksbankens Jubileumsfond, Landscapes of Democracy: politics, subjectivity and ecologies in environmental governance, sabbatical grant.

  • 2016-2019    Swedish Research Council (VR) grant, Conflict, Violence and Environmental Change: Investigating resource governance and legitimacy in transitional societies (COVEC), Lead investigator with Dr. Siri Eriksen (Noragric, Norwegian University of Life Sciences), Dr. Hemant R. Ojha (University of New South Wales, Australia and Southasia Institute of Advanced Studies, Nepal) and Dr. Ben Muok (Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology (JOOUST), Kenya).

  • 2015-2020    Norwegian Research Council grant, Interactions of Climate Extremes, Air Pollution and Agro-ecosystems (CiXPAG)” Project no. 244551/E10, Lead investigator of social science work package, Noragric, Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU), overall project leader, Dr. Jana Sillman, CICERO, Norway. 

  • 2014-2015    Marine Centre Grant, Producing Seascapes: Communities and marine spatial planning in Sweden and Scotland, lead investigator with Dr. Ruth Brennan (SAMS, Scotland), Steve Hurrel (artist), Linus Karlsson and Dr. Per Knutsson. University of Gothenburg.

Positions held

  • Chair of Rural Development in the Global South, Department of Urban and Rural Development, Swedish University of Agricultural Science, Uppsala, Sweden (2015-2019)

  • Professor II (guest professor), International Environment and Development Studies (Noragric), Norwegian Life Sciences University (NMBU), Ås, Norway (2015-2017).

  • Director of Environmental Social Science, School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden (2013-2015)

  • Professor of Environmental Social Science, School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden (2012-2015)

  • Senior Lecturer, Department of Geography, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK (2012)

  • Lecturer, Department of Geography, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK (2002-2012)

  • Research Fellow, Arkleton Centre for Rural Development, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, UK (2001-2002).

  • Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, University of Minnesota-Duluth, Duluth, Minnesota, USA (2001).

  • MacArthur Scholars Interdisciplinary Program on Global Change, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis USA (1994-2001)
     

PhD students

  • Ankita Shrestha, WEGO funded PhD student, University of Oslo
  • Eoin Farrelley, WEGO funded PhD student, University of Oslo
  • Linus Karlsson, faculty funded PhD student, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU)

List of publications

Books

 

2019          Nightingale, A.J. (ed.) with Karlsson, L., Böler, T., Campbell, B. (associate eds.) Environment and Sustainability in a Globalizing World, New York: Routledge. 

 

Peer Reviewed Journal Articles

2019    Nightingale, A.J., Eriksen, S., Marcus Taylor, Mark Pelling, Lars Otto Naess, Lindsay Jones, Katrina Brown, Emily Boyd, Blane Harvey, Rachel Bezner Kerr, Tim Forsyth, Lyla Mehta, Andrew Newsham, Ian Scoones, Thomas Tanner, Stephen Whitfield, “Climate solutions beyond technical fixes: addressing the great derangement” Climate and Development (in press).

2019    Nightingale, A.J. “Commoning for inclusion? Political communities, commons, exclusion, property and socio-natural becomings”, International Journal of the Commonsspecial issue on Feminist Political Ecology and the Commons, 13:1 16-35.

2019    Neimark, B., Childs, J., Nightingale, A.J., Cavanaugh, C., Sullivan, S., Benjaminsen, T., Batterbury, S., Koot, S., Harcourt, W., “Speaking Power to ‘Post-Truth’: Critical Political Ecology and the New Authoritarianism”,  Annals of the Association of American Geographers special issue on Authoritarianism, Populism, and the Environment: Comparative Experiences, Insights, and Perspectives, 1-11.

2019    Ensor, J.E., Wennström, P., Bhatterai, A., Nightingale, A.J., Eriksen, S., and Sillmann, J., “Asking the right questions in adaptation research and practice: Seeing beyond climate impacts in rural Nepal”, Environmental Science & Policy 94: 227-36.

2019    Ojha, H., Maraseni, T., Nightingale, A.J., Bhattarai, B., and Khatri, D, “Rescuing forests from the carbon trap”, Forest Policy and Economics 101: 15-18.

2018    Nightingale, A.J. “The socioenvironmental state: Political authority, subjects, and transformative socionatural change in an uncertain world”, Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space. 1(4), 688-711.

2018    Nightingale A.J. “Nepal's Towering Climate Adaptation Challenges”, Current History: A Journal of Contemporary Affairs 117: 135-141. 

2018    Nightingale, A.J. (2018) “Geography’s contribution to the Sustainable Development Goals: Ambivalence and performance”, Commentary. Dialogues in Human Geography 8: 196-200.

2018    Widengård, Marie, Nightingale, A.J.,  Peter Roberntz, Tobias Edman, and Allan Carlson. “Seeing Like a Standard: EU, Sustainable Biofuels, and Land Use Change in Africa”, ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies 17 (1), 49-87.

2018    Nightingale, A.J., Bhatterai, A., Ojha, H.R., Sigdel, T. and Rankin, K. “Fragmented public authority and state un/making in the ‘new’ Republic of Nepal”, article for a special issue on the State in South Asia in Modern Asian Studies. 52(2), 849-882. 

2018    Ahlborg, H. and Nightingale, A.J. “Theorizing power in political ecology: the whereof power in resource governance projects”, part of a special issue on power in political ecology, Journal of Political Ecology,25(1) 1-25. 

2018    Rankin, K. N., Nightingale, A.J., Hamal, P., & Sigdel, T. S. “Roads of change: political transition and state formation in Nepal’s agrarian districts” The Journal of Peasant Studies, 45:2, 280-299. doi:10.1080/03066150.2016.1216985 

2018    Karlsson L., Naess L.O., Nightingale A.J., Thompson J. “‘Triple wins’ or ‘triple faults’? Analysing the equity implications of policy discourses on climate-smart agriculture (CSA)”, for a special forum section on The Global Political Economy of Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Systems, Journal of Peasant Studies. 45(1), 150-174. 

2017    Nightingale, A.J. “Power and Politics in Climate Change Adaptation Efforts: struggles over authority and recognition in the context of political instability,” Geoforum. 84, 11-20.

2017    Nagoda, S. and Nightingale, A.J. “Participation and Power in Climate Change Adaptation Policies: Vulnerability in Food Security Programs in Nepal,” World Development. 100, 85-93. 

2016    Byrne, S., Nightingale A.J., Korf, B. “Making Territory: War, Post-war and the Entangled Scales of Contested Forest Governance in Mid-Western Nepal” Development and Change, 47(6): 1269–1293.

2016    Nightingale, A.J. “Adaptive Scholarship and Situated Knowledges? Hybrid Methodologies and Plural Epistemologies in Climate Change Adaptation Research” Area, 48:1, 41-47. 

2016    Ojha, H.R., Ghimire, S., Pain, A., Nightingale, A.J., Khatri, D.B., Dhungana, H. “Policy without politics: technocratic control of climate change adaptation policy making in Nepal” Climate Policy, 16:4 415-433 

2015    Eriksen, S.H., Nightingale A.J., Eakin, H. “Reframing adaptation: The political nature of climate change adaptation”, Global Environmental Change, 35, 523-533(co-first authorwith Eriksen). 

2015    Eriksen, S.H., Nightingale A.J, Eakin H. Special Issue Editors, “The Politics of Climate Change Adaptation”, Global Environmental Change, 35.

2015    Staddon, S. C., Nightingale, A.J. & Shrestha, S. K. 2015. “Exploring participation in ecological monitoring in Nepal's community forests”, Environmental Conservation, 42:3, 268-267

2014    Nightingale, A. J. and Rankin, K. “Political Transformations: collaborative feminist scholarship in Nepal” for the special issue on the “Cultural Politics of Gendered Identity, Place and Positionality” Himalaya, 34:1 105-117.

2014    Nightingale, A. J. and Sharma, J. R. “Community Forestry User-Groups and Conflict Resilience: Experiences of a Donor Supported Community Forestry Programme in Nepal” Disasters, 38:3 517-539. 

2014    Staddon, S., Nightingale, A. J. and Shrestha, S. “The social nature of participatory environmental monitoring” Society and Nature Resources, 27:9 899-914.

2013    Nightingale, A.J. and Ojha, H. R. “Rethinking Power and Authority: Symbolic Violence and Subjectivity in Nepal’s Terai Forests” Development and Change, 44:1 29-51. 

2013    Fisher, J. A., Patenaude, G., Meir, P., Nightingale, A.J., Rounsevell, M. D. A., Williams, M. & Woodhouse, I. H. “Strengthening conceptual foundations: Analysing frameworks for ecosystem services and poverty alleviation research” Global Environmental Change, 23:5 1098-1111. 

2013    Nightingale, A.J. “Fishing for Nature: the politics of subjectivity and emotion in Scottish in-shore fisheries management” Environment and Planning A, 45:10 2363-2378. 

2012    Ahlborg, H. and Nightingale, A.J. “Mismatch between scales of knowledge in Nepalese forestry: epistemology, power and policy implications” Ecology and Society17:4 16. 

2012    Cote, M. and Nightingale, A.J. “Resilience thinking meets social theory: situating social change in SES research” Progress in Human Geography, 36:4 475-789. 

2011    Nightingale, A.J. “Beyond Design Principles: subjectivity, emotion and the (ir)rational commons”, Society and Natural Resources24:2, 119-132.

2011    Nightingale, A.J. “Bounding difference: Intersectionality and the material production of gender, caste, class and environment in Nepal” Geoforumspecial issue on gender and environment 42:2, 153-162. 

2011    Hawkins, Roberta and Ojeda, Diana (Eds) with Kiran Asher, Brigitte Baptiste, Leila Harris, Sharlene Mollett, Andrea Nightingale, Dianne Rocheleau, Joni Seager, Farhana Sultana (Contributors (alphabetical order)), “Gender and environment: critical tradition and new challenges”, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space29:2, 237-253. 

2009    Nightingale, A.J. “Nepal’s Green Forests; a ‘thick’ aesthetics of contested landscapes”, Ethics, Place and Environment12:3, 313-331.

2009    Nightingale, A.J. “Warming up the Climate Change Debate: a challenge to policy based on adaptation”, the Journal of Forestry and Livelihoods8:1.

2006    Nightingale, A.J. “The Nature of Gender: work, gender and environment”, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space24:2, 165-185. 

2005    Nightingale, A.J. “‘The Experts Taught us All We Know’ Professionalisation and Knowledge in Nepalese Community Forestry” Antipode37:3, 581-604. 

2005    Lee, J., Árnason, A., Nightingale, A. and Shucksmith, M. “Networking: social capital and identities in European rural development”, Sociologica Ruralis45:4. 269-283. (conducted all fieldwork, analyzed data and contributed 30% to the writing of the paper). 

2003    Nightingale, A. J. “Nature-Society and Development: Social, Cultural and Ecological Change in Nepal”, Geoforum, 34:4, 525-540, 525-540. 

2003    Nightingale, A.J. “A Feminist in the Forest: Situated Knowledges and Mixing Methods in Natural Resource Management”, ACME: an International E-Journal for Critical Geographers, 2:1, 77-90. 

2002    Nightingale, A.J. “Participating or Just Sitting In? The Dynamics of Gender and Caste in Community Forestry” Journal of Forestry and Livelihoods, 2:1, 17-24. 

Book Chapters

2019    Ojha Hemant R., Ghate Rucha, Dorji Lam, Shrestha, Ankita, Paudel, Dinesh, Nightingale, Andrea, Shrestha, Krishna, Watto, Muhammad Arif, Kotru, Rajan, Governance: Key for Environmental Sustainability in the Hindu Kush Himalaya. In: Wester P, Mishra A, Mukherji A, et al. (eds) The Hindu Kush Himalaya Assessment: Mountains, Climate Change, Sustainability and People.Cham: Springer International Publishing, 545-578.

2019    Ngwenya, P. and Nightingale, A.J. “Rethinking the ‘ethics’ of community economies” in Feminist Political Ecology and the Economics of Care, Bauhardt, C. and Harcourt, W. (eds.), 131-161.

2018    Coordinating Lead Authors: Balachandran, G. & Mallard, G., Lead Authors: Arewa, O., Baccaro, L., Büthe, T., Nightingale, A.J., Pénet, P., Pestre, D., Roberts, A., “Governing Capital, Labor and Nature in a Changing World”, International Panel for Social Progress,Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Vol. 2, Ch. 12, 491-522.

2017    Nightingale, A.J. “Environment and Gender” in the International Encyclopedia of Geography, Douglas Richardson, Noel Castree, Michael F. Goodchild, Audrey Kobayashi, Weidong Liu, and Richard A. Marston (eds.), New Jersey: John Wiley and Sons Ltd. 1-13. 

2017    Nightingale, A.J. “A Feminist in the Forest: Situated Knowledges and Mixing Methods in Natural Resource Management” in the Earthscan Reader on Forests: Gender and Forests, Carol J. Pierce Colfer, Marlène Elias, Bimbika Sijapati Basnett, Susan Hummel (eds.), New York: Routledge. 109-122.

2015    Nightingale, A.J. “Commons and Alternative Rationalities: Subjectivity, Emotion and the (Non)rational Commons”. in Bollier, D. and Helfrich, S (eds). Patterns of Commoning. The Commons Strategies Group: Amherst, Massachusetts; Jena, Germany; Chiang Mai, Thailand. 298-308.

2015    Nightingale, A.J. “Challenging the Romance with Resilience,” in Practicing Feminist Political Ecologies: Moving Beyond the ‘Green Economy’, Harcourt, W. and Nelson, I. (eds.), Zed Books, 182-210.

2015    Nightingale, A.J. “A Socionature Approach to Adaptation: Political transition, intersectionality, and climate change programmes in Nepal” in Climate Change Adaptation and Development: Transforming Paradigms and Practices,Tor Håkon Inderberg, Siri Eriksen, Karen O’Brien and Linda Sygna, eds., London: Routledge. 219-234. 

2014    Nightingale, A.J. “Society-Nature” in Sage Handbook of Human Geography, Roger Lee, Noel Castree, Rob Kitchin, Victoria Lawson, Anssi Paasi, Chris Philo, Sarah Radcliffe, Susan M Roberts and Charles W J Withers (eds). London: Sage. 120-147. 

2014    Nightingale, A.J. “Questioning Commoning” in the Barron, Drake and Morrow (eds) Book Symposium on Take Back the Economy: An Ethical Guide for Transforming Our Communitiesby J.K. Gibson-Graham, Jenny Cameron and Stephen Healy, Journal of Social and Cultural Geography, 15:8, 980-981.

2011    Nightingale A.J. “The Embodiment of Nature: Fishing, Emotion and the Politics of Environmental Values”, in Embodied Values and Environment, E. Brady and P. Phemister eds., Springer, 135-147. (peer-reviewed)

2010    Nightingale, A. J.  and Pettigrew, J. “Everyday Spaces of Protest in Kathmandu,” in Hope and Fear: Living Through the People’s War in Nepal, P. Manandhar and D. Seddon (eds.) in New Delhi: Adroit Publishers, 214-220.

2010    Nightingale, A.J. “Ecofeminism” in Encyclopedia of Geography, B. Warf ed., Sage, 817-820.

2010    Nightingale, A.J. “Expedition Ethics” in Understanding Educational Expeditions, Simon Beames (ed.). Sense Publishing, 103-112.

2010    Nightingale, A.J. “A Forest Community or Community Forestry? Beliefs, meanings and nature in north-western Nepal,” in Under the Roof of the World: Critical Himalayan Environments,A. Guneratne (ed.), London:Routledge 196-240. 

2009    Nightingale, A.J. “Methods: Triangulation” in International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, R. Kitchen and N. Thrift. eds.,. Oxford: Elsevier, July, vol. 11 489-492. 

2009    Nightingale, A.J. “Methods: Oral History, Ecological” in International Encyclopedia of Human Geography,R. Kitchen and N. Thrift. eds., Oxford: Elsevier, July, vol. 8, 34-36. 

Emneord: Samfunnsgeografi

Publikasjoner

  • Gonda, Noémi; Flores, Selmira; Casolo, Jennifer J. & Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (2023). Resilience and conflict: rethinking climate resilience through Indigenous territorial struggles. Journal of Peasant Studies. ISSN 0306-6150. 50(6), s. 2312–2338. doi: 10.1080/03066150.2022.2161372. Fulltekst i vitenarkiv
  • Khatri, Dil B.; Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn; Ojha, Hemant; Maskey, Gyanu & Lama ‘Tsumpa’, Pema Norbu (2022). Multi-scale politics in climate change: the mismatch of authority and capability in federalizing Nepal. Climate Policy. ISSN 1469-3062. 22(8), s. 1084–1096. doi: 10.1080/14693062.2022.2090891. Fulltekst i vitenarkiv
  • Ojha, Hemant; Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn; Gonda, Noémi; Muok, Benard Oula; Eriksen, Siri Ellen Hallstrøm & Khatri, Dil [Vis alle 7 forfattere av denne artikkelen] (2022). Transforming environmental governance: critical action intellectuals and their praxis in the field. Sustainability Science. ISSN 1862-4065. 17(2), s. 621–635. doi: 10.1007/s11625-022-01108-z. Fulltekst i vitenarkiv
  • Ahlborg, Helene & Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (2022). Chimeras of Resource Geographies: Unbounding Ontologies and Knowing Nature. I Himley, Matthew; Havice, Elizabeth & Valdivia, Gabriele (Red.), The Routledge Handbook of Critical Resource Geography. Routledge. ISSN 9781138358805. s. 23–33.
  • Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn & Harcourt, Wendy (2021). Gender, Nature, Body. I Akram-Lodhi, A. Haroon; Dietz, Kristina; Engels, Bettina & McKay, Ben M. (Red.), Handbook of Critical Agrarian Studies. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISSN 978 1 78897 245 1. s. 131–138.
  • Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn; Gonda, Noémi & Eriksen, Siri Ellen Hallstrøm (2021). Affective adaptation = effective transformation? Shifting the politics of climate change adaptation and transformation from the status quo. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change (WIRESs). ISSN 1757-7780. 13(1), s. 1–16. doi: 10.1002/wcc.740. Fulltekst i vitenarkiv
  • Eriksen, Siri; Schipper, E Lisa F; Scoville-Simonds, Morgan; Vincent, Katharine; Adam, Hans Nicolai & Brooks, Nick [Vis alle 20 forfattere av denne artikkelen] (2021). Adaptation interventions and their effect on vulnerability in developing countries: Help, hindrance or irrelevance? World Development. ISSN 0305-750X. 141. doi: 10.1016/j.worlddev.2020.105383. Fulltekst i vitenarkiv
  • Nightingale, Andrea; Karlsson, Linus; Saxer, Laura & Campell, Ben (2019). The range of environmental concerns. I Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (Red.), Environment and Sustainability in a Globalizing World. Routledge. ISSN 978-0-7656-4644-6. s. 101–126. doi: 10.4324/9781315714714-6.
  • Nightingale, Andrea & Karlsson, Linus (2019). Issues of scale in producing sustainability. I Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (Red.), Environment and Sustainability in a Globalizing World. Routledge. ISSN 978-0-7656-4644-6. s. 82–100. doi: 10.4324/9781315714714-5.
  • Nightingale, Andrea; Böhler, Tom; Karlsson, Linus & Campell, Ben (2019). Enacting sustainability. I Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (Red.), Environment and Sustainability in a Globalizing World. Routledge. ISSN 978-0-7656-4644-6. s. 56–81. doi: 10.4324/9781315714714-4.
  • Nightingale, Andrea; Karlsson, Linus; Böhler, Tom & Campell, Ben (2019). Narratives of sustainability. Key concepts and issues. I Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (Red.), Environment and Sustainability in a Globalizing World. Routledge. ISSN 978-0-7656-4644-6. s. 35–55.
  • Nightingale, Andrea; Böhler, Tom; Campell, Ben & Karlsson, Linus (2019). Background and history of sustanability. I Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (Red.), Environment and Sustainability in a Globalizing World. Routledge. ISSN 978-0-7656-4644-6. s. 13–34.
  • Nightingale, Andrea; Lenaerts, Lutgart; Shrestha, Ankita; Lama, Pema Norbu & Ohja, Hemant R. (2019). The Material Politics of Citizenship: Struggles over Resources, Authority and Belonging in the New Federal Republic of Nepal. South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies. ISSN 0085-6401. 42(5). doi: 10.1080/00856401.2019.1639111. Fulltekst i vitenarkiv
  • Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn; Eriksen, Siri; Taylor, Marcus; Forsyth, Timothy; Pelling, Mark & Newsham, Andrew [Vis alle 17 forfattere av denne artikkelen] (2019). Beyond Technical Fixes: climate solutions and the great derangement. Climate and Development. ISSN 1756-5529. 12(4), s. 343–352. doi: 10.1080/17565529.2019.1624495. Fulltekst i vitenarkiv
  • Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (2019). Commoning for inclusion? commons, exclusion, property and socio-natural becomings. International Journal of the Commons. ISSN 1875-0281. 13(1), s. 16–39. doi: 10.18352/ijc.927.
  • Ensor, Jonathan Edward; Wennstroem, Patrick; Bhatterai, Anil; Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn; Eriksen, Siri & Sillmann, Jana (2019). Asking the right questions in adaptation research and practice: Seeing beyond climate impacts in rural Nepal. Environmental Science and Policy. ISSN 1462-9011. 94, s. 227–236. doi: 10.1016/j.envsci.2019.01.013. Fulltekst i vitenarkiv
  • Neimark, Benjamin; Childs, John; Nightingale, Andrea; Cavanagh, Connor Joseph; Sullivan, Sian & Benjaminsen, Tor A [Vis alle 9 forfattere av denne artikkelen] (2019). Speaking Power to “Post-Truth”: Critical Political Ecology and the New Authoritarianism. Annals of the American Association of Geographers. ISSN 2469-4452. 109(2), s. 613–623. doi: 10.1080/24694452.2018.1547567.
  • Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (2018). The socioenvironmental state: Political authority, subjects, and transformative socionatural change in an uncertain world. Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space. ISSN 2514-8486. 1(4), s. 688–711. doi: 10.1177/2514848618816467.
  • Ahlborg, Helene & Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (2018). Theorizing power in political ecology: the where of power in resource governance projects . Journal of political ecology. ISSN 1073-0451. 25(1), s. 381–401. doi: 10.2458/v25i1.22804. Fulltekst i vitenarkiv
  • Nagoda, Sigrid & Nightingale, Andrea (2017). Participation and Power in Climate Change Adaptation Policies: Vulnerability in Food Security Programs in Nepal. World Development. ISSN 0305-750X. 100, s. 85–93. doi: 10.1016/j.worlddev.2017.07.022.
  • Nightingale, Andrea (2017). Power and politics in climate change adaptation efforts: Struggles over authority and recognition in the context of political instability. Geoforum. ISSN 0016-7185. 84, s. 11–20. doi: 10.1016/j.geoforum.2017.05.011.
  • Eriksen, Siri; Nightingale, Andrea & Eakin, Hallie (2015). Reframing adaptation: The political nature of climate change adaptation. Global Environmental Change. ISSN 0959-3780. 35, s. 523–533. doi: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.09.014.
  • Nightingale, Andrea (2015). Adaptive scholarship and situated knowledges? Hybrid methodologies and plural epistemologies in climate change adaptation research. Area (London 1969). ISSN 0004-0894. 48(1), s. 41–47. doi: 10.1111/area.12195.

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  • Nightingale, Andrea Joslyn (2019). Environment and Sustainability in a Globalizing World. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-7656-4644-6. 271 s.

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  • Neimark, Ben; Childs, John; Nightingale, Andrea; Cavanagh, Connor Joseph; Sullivan, Sian & Benjaminsen, Tor A [Vis alle 9 forfattere av denne artikkelen] (2020). Speaking power to “post-truth”: critical political ecology and the new authoritarianism. I McCarthy, James (Red.), Environmental governance in a populist/authoritarian era. Routledge. ISSN 9780367346539.
  • Nightingale, Andrea (2014). A social theory critique of socio-ecological systems.
  • Nightingale, Andrea (2014). Playing with politics and power in Nepal’s climate change adaptation programs: From NAPA to LAPA.
  • Marin, Andrei Florin; Nightingale, Andrea & Eriksen, Siri E H (2014). Why adaptation needs to be reframed.
  • Marin, Andrei Florin; Eriksen, Siri E H & Nightingale, Andrea (2014). Why adaptation needs to be reframed.

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Publisert 26. feb. 2019 08:57 - Sist endret 22. aug. 2023 14:08

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