Graeme Auld
Graeme Auld is a Lecturer with the Department of Political Science, Yale University
Auld's research examines the emergence and institutional dynamics of non-state and hybrid forms of governance, particularly social and environmental certification in the coffee, forest and fisheries sectors. His various ongoing projects assess the extent and importance of certification programs' institutional and problem-focused outcomes, the interest-based politics that underlie their development, and how they interact with traditional state-based governance arrangements.
His collaborative and individual works have been published in journals including Global Environmental Politics, Forest Policy and Economics, Business and Politics, the Journal of Strategic Management Education, and the Journal of Environmental Management. A co-authored book, Governing through Markets: Forest Certification and the Emergence of Non-state Authority (with Cashore and Newsom), was awarded the International Studies Association's 2005 Sprout Award for the best book on international environmental policy and politics. He is currently working to transform his dissertation into a book on the emergence of certification in the coffee, fishery and forest sectors.
