State, governance and environmental sustainability a cross-national analysis /
Abstract (Summary)
Research Questions:
What determines the level of environmental sustainability in national level analyses? How can the
quality of governance be defined, measured and applied in the dynamics of political processes? And, how
does the quality of governance influence the level of environmental sustainability?
Model proposed and a priori Expectations:
Model Summary
ES = ?0+ QG?1+ DEM?2+ EG?3+ GEI?4+ PG?5+ ?
a priori Expectation of Relationships
QG +
DEM +
EG - ES
GEI -
PG -
Where ES denotes Environmental Sustainability; QG, Quality of Governance; DEM, Level of Democracy; EG, Annual
Economic Growth Rate; GEI, Global Economic Integration; and PG implies Population Growth Rate.
Methods:
The cross-national design adopted in this study attempts to investigate some of the general
mechanisms of environmental sustainability and its multifaceted conditions, using bivariate descriptive
statistics (correlation matrix) and multivariate analyses (OLS regression). Bivariate descriptive statistics
addresses the zero-order correlations among all variables, which consist of one for all 122-sample country
and six regional-economic groups, i.e. Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, The Middle East and North
Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, East and Central Europe and the OECD (Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development) member states. And then, multivariate analyses with five independent
variables are examined.
Conclusion:
Being aware of the inconclusiveness and the nature of multifaceted characteristics of
environmental sustainability, this study proposes the concepts of governance, political software and
political elasticity theory as a political and institutional condition for articulating the determinant of the
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level of environmental sustainability and argues that the quality of national governance is intrinsically
related to, and even generates pressure for, environmental sustainability.
Suggestions for Further Research:
Although the cross-national design research can provide not only a context to interpret the case
studies but also hypotheses for further studies, further research should try to combine cross-national studies
with longitudinal and case studies to encompass the complex and multidimensional nature of environmental
studies. Moreover, endless efforts have to be put into improving conceptual and operational definitions and
measurements.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
School Location:USA - Tennessee
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:
ISBN:
Date of Publication: