Publications
Find journal articles, external publications and SEI’s own portfolio of reports and briefs.
Find journal articles, external publications and SEI’s own portfolio of reports and briefs.
This article examines sanitation policy implementation and compares the gap between its intentions and outcomes in Rwanda and Uganda.
Analysis of impacts of multiple drivers on hydrology of the Srepok River in Cambodia.
This article presents a systemic map of literature relating to ecotechnologies designed for use in the wastewater sector.
This SEI report discusses integration of traditional knowledge of Indigenous Peoples into the co-production of climate services for climate change adaptation.
This brief shows how the EU Commission’s approach to just transition may influence the politics of decarbonization within the EU.
Read about a systematic map that catalogues existing research on behavioural interventions aimed at changing food consumption and waste patterns.
This report seeks to map the Swedish development research community to understand, and offer recommendations for strengthening, its current standing.
This chapter focuses on bioethanol as a cooking fuel and the impacts of its use as an alternative to traditional biomass fuels in Sub-Saharan Africa.
This article reflects on global responses to COVID-19 and what they mean for efforts to build more climate-resilient and equitable futures.
This brief lays out five scenarios of how societies and their socioeconomic prospects might change in the post-pandemic world, looking as far ahead as 2050.
This article explores how diffusion of low-carbon technologies impacts gender and social equity in intersectional ways and where “greening” projects fall short.
This brief sets out the often overlooked synergies between sanitation development and climate adaptation and explores a pathway to better integrating the two.
This chapter discusses four critical aspects that can facilitate sustainable bioenergy transitions and climate-compatible development in Sub-Saharan Africa.
This article examines policy coordination within and between the water and energy sectors, and explores which factors best foster their integration.
Paper presents an approach to co-creating a set of viable, acceptable and sustainable development pathways for the livestock sector with local stakeholders.