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List of Figures
List of Tables
Contributors
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Glossary
Introduction: Setting the Scene for Green Finance
PART 1 Green Finance Market and Regulatory Environments
1 Sustainable Finance Ecosystem: A Case Study from Aotearoa New Zealand
2 Accounting for a Green Economy: Sustainable Finance and the Harmonisation of Sustainability Reporting
3 Double Materiality: Why Does It Matter for Sustainability Reporting?
4 Climate Scenario Analysis for Central Banks
5 Public Financial Institutions and Climate Change
6 Internal Carbon Pricing in Research and Practice
PART 2 Green Finance Instruments and Their Effects
7 Corporate Environmental Impact: Measurement, Data, and Information
8 Corporate Carbon Management Systems and Carbon Opportunity: An International Study
9 Beyond Monetary Gain: Motivational Correlates of Sustainable Finance
10 The Influence of Firms’ ESG Initiatives on Firm Value: An Analysis of Select European Firms
11 The Yields of Green Bank Bonds: Are Banks Perceived as Trustworthy in the Green Financial Markets?
PART 3 Sector- and Country-Specific Aspects
12 The Quest for Global Green Finance Participation: Developing Countries and Barriers to Full Participation
13 Accounting as a Mediating Practice between Values and Contexts: A Research Agenda on Impact Investment
14 When do Bank Loans Become Green?
15 Public Policy and Green Finance in China
16 Green Finance in China: System, Practice, and International Role
17 Finance without Unified Measurement Framework: Rise of Collective Norm Entrepreneurs in Impact Finance in Japan
18 Green Finance Strategies in Africa: A Focus on Capital Market-Based Impact Investments in Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises in Ghana
19 The United Nations’ Principles for Responsible Banking, CSR, and Corporate Governance in the Banking Industry
PART 4 Critical Perspectives
20 Measuring Biodiversity: Mission Impossible?
21 Can Nuclear Attract Green Finance?
22 Green, Greener, Not Green Enough?: Institutional Forces Driving the European Green Bond Market
23 The Hidden Costs of Impact Measurement
PART 5 Building Theory on Green Finance
24 Sustainability Reporting of State-Owned Enterprises: Current Practices and Implications of the CSR Directive
25 Assessing the Current State of Research on Climate and Environment-Related Financial Risks: What Are We Missing? A Review and Research Agenda
26 A Systematic Literature Review on Financial Stock Performance of Sustainable Investments: Bridging the Gap between Empirical Evidence and Recent Theoretical Models
27 Arguing for Urban Climate Change Adaptation Finance – A Bibliometric Study: An Interdisciplinary Systematic Longitudinal Literature Review and Bibliometric Analysis of Urban Adaptation Financing, a Global North Perspective 2010–2021
28 Green Bonds as a Tool of Green Financing
29 Building Normativity in Sustainability Reporting: From National to European Union-Level Regulations
30 Air Pollution and Investors’ Behavior: A Review of Recent Literature
Index

출판사 책소개

Green finance is heralded in theory and practice as the new panacea – the ideal way to support the green transition of businesses into more sustainable, environmentally responsible forms, by means of incentivized financial investments. This handbook brings together a variety of expert scholars with industry specialists to offer the most authoritative overview of green finance to date, presenting the current situation in the field. It focuses on green finance in a comprehensive way, discussing its characteristics, underlying principles, and mechanisms.

The book carefully illuminates the issues surrounding green finance and delineates its boundaries, mapping out and displaying the disparate voices, traditions, and professional communities engaged in green and sustainable finance activities. Specifically, it examines the "environmental" in the environmental, social, and governance (ESG) measurements, while also discussing the interplay between each measurement. It develops a range of analytic approaches to the subject, both appreciative and critical, and synthesizes new theoretical constructs that make better sense of hybrid financial relationships. Furthermore, the handbook illustrates existing best practices and theories, and critically examines the gaps to derive the necessary future research questions. It highlights the essential issues and debates and provides a robust research agenda. As such, it helps to create an effective market for the various green financing instruments through clarification and standardization.

This handbook will be the standard reference work for a broad audience, encompassing scholars, researchers, and students but also interested professionals, regulators, and policymakers wishing to orient themselves in a rapidly developing and increasingly topical field.



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출판사 책소개

알라딘제공

Green finance is heralded in theory and practice as the new panacea ? the ideal way to support the green transition of businesses into more sustainable, environmentally responsible forms, by means of incentivized financial investments. This handbook brings together a variety of expert scholars with industry specialists to offer the most authoritative overview of green finance to date, presenting the current situation in the field. It focuses on green finance in a comprehensive way, discussing its characteristics, underlying principles, and mechanisms.

The book carefully illuminates the issues surrounding green finance and delineates its boundaries, mapping out and displaying the disparate voices, traditions, and professional communities engaged in green and sustainable finance activities. Specifically, it examines the "environmental" in the environmental, social, and governance (ESG) measurements, while also discussing the interplay between each measurement. It develops a range of analytic approaches to the subject, both appreciative and critical, and synthesizes new theoretical constructs that make better sense of hybrid financial relationships. Furthermore, the handbook illustrates existing best practices and theories, and critically examines the gaps to derive the necessary future research questions. It highlights the essential issues and debates and provides a robust research agenda. As such, it helps to create an effective market for the various green financing instruments through clarification and standardization.

This handbook will be the standard reference work for a broad audience, encompassing scholars, researchers, and students but also interested professionals, regulators, and policymakers wishing to orient themselves in a rapidly developing and increasingly topical field.



This handbook brings together a variety of expert scholars with industry specialists to offer the most authoritative overview of Green Finance to date, presenting the state of the art. It focuses on Green Finance in a comprehensive way, discussing its characteristics, underlying principles and mechanisms.