Björn-Ola Linnér (born 1963) is a Swedish climate policy scholar and professor at Linköping University. He is program director of Mistra Geopolitics, a research programme that critically examines and explores the interplay between the dynamics of geopolitics, human security, and global environmental change. He is also affiliated at the Institute for Science, Innovation and Society at Oxford University and the Stockholm Environment Institute.
Biography
Linnér was born in 1963, Sweden. He received a PhD degree in 1998 on the dissertation The world household: Georg Borgström and the postwar population–resource crisis.,[1] which was later reworked into the book The Return of Malthus: Environmentalism andPostwar Population–Resource Crises, where he analyses neo-Malthusianism in conservationism, environmentalism and in international politics in the 20th century.[2] In 2008, he was appointed professor at the Department of Thematic Studies – Environmental Change at Linköping University.[3]
Linnér's climate policy research focuses on societal transformations to sustainability,[4][5] linkages between climate and sustainable development policy,[6] international climate governance[7][8][9][10][11] and tools for climate visualization.[12]
He is associate editor of the Oxford research encyclopedia of climate science.[13]
Björn-Ola Linnér, Victoria Wibeck. Sustainability Transformations: Agents and Drivers across Societies (Cambridge University Press; 2019) (ISBN9781108766975)[14]
Benjamin Sovacool, Björn-Ola Linnér. The Political Economy of Climate Adaptation (Palgrave Macmillan; 2015)
^Linnér, Björn-Ola (1998). The world household: Georg Borgström and the postwar population-resource crisis. Linköping Studies in Arts and Science, 0282-9800; 181. Linköping: Tema, Univ. Libris 8372507. ISBN
91-7219-355-7.
^Linnér, Björn-Ola (2003). The Return of Malthus: Environmentalism andPostwar Population–Resource Crises.
^Linnér, Björn-Ola & Wibeck, Victoria (2020), Conceptualising variations in societal transformations towards sustainability, Environmental Science & Policy.106: 221–227.
^Linnér, B-O. and Selin, H. (2013). "The United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development: Forty Years in the Making". Environment and Planning. C: Government and Policy 31 (6): sid. 971–987.
^Sovacool, B, Linnér, B–O & Klein, RJT (2017). Climate change adaptation and the Least Developed Countries Fund (LDCF): Qualitative insights from policy implementation in the Asia-Pacific. Climatic Change.140, 2:209–226.
^Kuyper, J., Schroeder, H., and Linnér, B-O. (2018). The Evolution of the UNFCCC. Annual Reviewof Environment and Resources. 43:15.1–15.
^Kuyper, J. W., Linnér, B.-O. & Schroeder, H. (2017), Non-state actors in hybrid global climate governance: justice, legitimacy, and effectiveness in a post-Paris era. WIREs Clim Change, e497. doi:10.1002/wcc.497.
^Bäckstrand, K., Kuyper, J. W., Linnér, B-O. & Lövbrand, E. (2017) Non-state actors in global climate governance: from Copenhagen to Paris and beyond. Environmental Politics 26, 4: 561–579.
^Wibeck, V, Neset, T-S., Linnér, B-O. (2013). ”Communicating climate change through ICT-based visualization: towards an analytical
framework”. Sustainability 5: sid. 4760–4777.