Overcoming the Tragedy of the Good Governance Norm Complex: Towards Effective Implementation of the Global Sustainable Development Agenda

Jul 31 2019 10:30
Australia/Melbourne
RMIT Council Chamber Building 1, Level 2R
124 La Trobe Street
Melbourne VIC 3000
Australia  Australia

The Jean Monnet Sustainable Development Goals Network at the European Union Centre of Excellence at RMIT is pleased to invite you to this public lecture by Professor Ben Cashore (Yale/NUS) titled 'Overcoming the Tragedy of the Good Governance Norm Complex: Towards Effective Implementation of the Global Sustainable Development Agenda'. 
 

 
Presenter
Prof Ben Cashore - Yale University and NUS

When
Wednesday, 31 July 2019, 10:30am – 11:30am

Where
RMIT Council Chamber
Building 1, Level 2R
124 La Trobe St
Melbourne

Cost 
Free

Registration 
RSVP here

 

About the speaker 

Benjamin Cashore is Professor of Environmental Governance and Political Science at Yale University’s School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and Visiting Li Ka Shing Professor of Public Management at Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore. He is courtesy joint appointed in Yale’s Department of Political Science and is a Senior Research Fellow, Yale MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies. He is Director of the Governance, Environment and Markets (GEM) Initiative at Yale and is the former Joseph C. Fox Faculty Director of the Yale International Fox Fellows Program.

Cashore’s major research interests include transnational business regulation; non-state market driven (NSMD) global governance, corporate social responsibility, the emergence of domestic and international regulatory policies; and the role of firms, non-state actors, civil society in shaping these trends. His ongoing research efforts are focused on understanding how the interaction of multiple -levels of governance, public and private, might evolve, in the global era, to produce durable global environmental governance and sustainability solutions. He pursues this approach through thematic efforts: policy change and policy learning; intervening to address “super wicked” problems; and the influence of globalization and internationalization on domestic policy processes. His substantive research interests include climate policy, land use change, and sustainable forest management/deforestation.

For more background information to this public lecture click here.
 

European Union Centre
Social and Global Studies Centre
RMIT University, Melbourne

Email: [email protected]
Web: rmit.edu.au/eucentre

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