• Adapting seasonal beekeeping patterns in western Norway 

      Bremer, Scott Ronald; Meisch, Simon; Hempel, Manuel; Dunn-Sigouin, Etienne (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2024)
      This paper is about how Western Norway beekeepers synchronise their practices to perceived patterns of seasonal rhythms and adapt their timings and ways of working as they sense shifts in these rhythmic seasonal patterns ...
    • Beyond rules: How institutional cultures and climate governance interact 

      Bremer, Scott; Glavovic, Bruce; Meisch, Simon; Schneider, Paul; Wardekker, Arjan (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)
      Institutions have a central role in climate change governance. But while there is a flourishing literature on institutions' formal rules, processes, and organizational forms, scholars lament a relative lack of attention ...
    • Extended Peer Communities: Appraising the contributions of tacit knowledges in climate change decision-making 

      Meisch, Simon; Bremer, Scott; Young, Mark Thomas; Funtowicz, Silvio Oscar (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2022)
      This paper explores the implications of assessing tacit knowledges of climatic change in extended peer communities, as applied in two European research projects on climate action. Post-normal science (PNS) proposes the ...
    • Nexus disrupted: Lived realities and the water-energy-food nexus from an infrastructure perspective 

      Bruns, Antje; Meisch, Simon; Ahmed, Abubakari; Meissner, Richard; Romero-Lankao, Patricia (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2022)
      In recent years, the water-energy-food nexus gained traction in science and policy debates to address the relationships between water, energy and food sectors. Inspired by Political Ecology thinking, we advocate for a nexus ...
    • The temporal cleavage: the case of populist retrotopia vs. climate emergency 

      Hanusch, Frederic; Meisch, Simon (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2022)
      How do time perceptions politicize contestation in the case of climate politics? We argue that across Western Europe and North America, contestation in the climate case and beyond forms along an emerging temporal dividing ...