"Highlighting the role of climate institutions in shaping how we understand as well as act on climate change, this important collection points to both obstacles and opportunities to take social difference seriously in climate spaces. Gender, Intersectionality and Climate Institutions in Industrialised States is essential reading for all who seek to make climate change policy both effective and just."Nicole Detraz, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, The University of Memphis, USA"What an exciting volume! It pushes the boundaries of where we should look for the workings of gender and its intersections, convincingly bringing into view a range of unlikely sectors and surprising sites. And it does so with theoretical sophistication, paying attention to institutions while celebrating critical acts. A highly welcome contribution to the literatures on gender mainstreaming and climate change."Elisabeth Prügl, Professor of International Relations, Co-Director, Gender Centre, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva, Switzerland"This volume is a valuable addition to the small but growing body of critical feminist scholarship on policies, problems and power relations within climate institutions in the global north. Drawing on institutionalist and intersectional theoretical framings, the chapters expertly tackle tricky questions (such as ‘does having women at the table really make a difference?’) and show why feminist research on climate politics in rich, industrialised contexts is urgently needed to redress longstanding inequalities, misconceptions and oversights in this expanding field of inquiry."Sherilyn MacGregor, Reader in Environmental Politics, The University of Manchester, UK.