Your search found 3 records
1 1995. Stockholm: Ongoing efforts to ensure water quality. Stockholm: La qualit, de l'eau, une mobilisation permanente. Hydroplus, 55:29-31; 34.
Water quality ; Wastewater ; Water supply ; Water management / Sweden / Stockholm
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 4042 Record No: H017384)

2 1997. With rivers to the sea: Interaction of land activities, fresh water and enclosed coastal seas: Abstracts, posters. Joint Conference - 7th Stockholm Water Symposium and the 3rd International Conference on the Environmental Management of Enclosed Coastal Seas (EMECS), 10-15 August 1997, Stockholm, Sweden. 119p.
Water resources ; Water management ; Water quality ; Water pollution ; Environmental effects ; Reservoirs ; Monitoring ; Watercourses ; Wastewater ; Irrigation systems ; Wetlands ; Rivers ; Computer techniques ; Education / Finland / Sweden / Germany / Poland / Latvia / Estonia / Lithuania / Nigeria / Brazil / India / South Africa / Japan / Russian Federation / Baltic sea / Black Sea / Chesapeake Bay / Gulf of Thailand / Seto Inland Sea / Neva Bay / Stockholm / Obere Leine River / Kurshiu Marios Lagoon / Gulf of Finland / Leba Basin / Gulf of Riga / Danube River / Caspian Sea / Guanabara Bay / Rio-de Janeiro / Cape Town / Lagos Lagoon / Osaka Bay
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G000 WIT Record No: H021084)

3 Heikkinen, M. 2022. The role of network participation in climate change mitigation: a city-level analysis. International Journal of Urban Sustainable Development, 15p. (Online first) [doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/19463138.2022.2036163]
Climate change mitigation ; Networks ; Participation ; Urban areas ; Towns ; Governance ; Sustainability ; Information exchange ; Political aspects / Europe / Finland / Spain / Sweden / Helsinki / Madrid / Stockholm
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H050916)
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/19463138.2022.2036163
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H050916.pdf
(0.85 MB) (872 KB)
Cities and networks play an important role in climate change mitigation. Various international, regional, and local networks seek to increase cooperation between cities or between cities and other stakeholders. However, we still have a poor understanding of how these formalised networks help cities to mitigate climate change at different levels of urban climate governance. Here, I analyse experiences of participation in formal climate change mitigation-related networks from the global to the local level in three European capital cities: Helsinki, Madrid, and Stockholm. As multilevel networking is a strategic tool for cities, different benefits are highlighted at different levels of governance. Some networks are more oriented towards politics and planning, while others are more practical. Formalised networking is also networking between individual people, which should be studied further. The results demonstrate both the advantages of networks and challenges in developing beneficial networking to support climate change mitigation.

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