Research groups
Short info
Research
2024-2025 BALTIC Project: https://www4.uib.no/en/research/research-projects/baltic
2021-2023 CINTRAN Project: https://coaltransitions.org/projects/cintran/
2021-2022 LOCALNET Project: https://www.cats-network.eu/projects/former-projects/localnet-local-governments-climate-change-narratives-and-networks-in-turkey
Teaching
Geographies of the Green Transformation (https://www.uib.no/emne/GEO324?sem=2023v)
This course in human geography addresses the concepts, theories and discourses of the green transformation. It situates green transformation-related challenges and solutions, including circular economy, green consumerism, and low-carbon energy production, within the context of a highly unequal and rapidly changing world. The course demonstrates how dynamic political, economic, and technological contexts can amplify environmental injustices yet also present opportunities for transformative responses.
Geographies of the Green Economy | University of Bergen (uib.no)
This is an interdisciplinary course on theory and research that fits under the broad umbrella of the green economy. Different methods, foci of interest, as well as epistemologies now are common in green economy research. Grounded on active student participation, this research-based course discusses how the concept of the green economy affects societal and economic activities at different scales. The majority of classes consist of discussions around assigned readings. While this is not a methods class, students and professors will discuss methodologies appropriate to green economy research. Our goal is for the range of topics and our discussions throughout the semester to help you identify the kinds of research questions, methods, and analytic strategies pursued by a variety of interdisciplinary scholars which might be useful in your own work.
Publications
Conference lecture
Academic article
- Mahir Yazar; Lukas Hermwille; Håvard Haarstad (2022). Right-wing and populist support for climate mitigation policies: Evidence from Poland and its carbon-intensive Silesia region. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar; Irem Daloglu-Cetinkaya; Ece Baykal-Fide et al. (2023). Diffusion of global climate policy: National depoliticization, local repoliticization in Turkey. (external link)
- Irem Daloğlu Çetinkaya; Mahir Yazar; Sultan Kılınç et al. (2022). Urban climate resilience and water insecurity: future scenarios of water supply and demand in Istanbul. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar; Håvard Haarstad; Lene Lundøy Drengenes et al. (2022). Governance learning from collective actions for just climate adaptation in cities. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar; Håvard Haarstad (2023). Populist far right discursive-institutional tactics in European regional decarbonization. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar; Abigail York (2022). Disentangling justice as recognition through public support for local climate adaptation policies: Insights from the Southwest US. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar (2022). Norm domestication challenges for local climate actions: A lesson from Arizona, USA. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar; Håvard Haarstad; Johan Carl Magnus Elfving (2025). Cities incorporate equity in their climate policies but overlook procedural justice in decision-making. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar; Abigail York (2023). Nature-based solutions through collective actions for spatial justice in urban green commons. (external link)
- Håvard Haarstad; Mahir Yazar (2025). Urban sustainability: a spatial justice critique. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar; Irem Daloglu Cetinkaya; Muzaffer Can Iban et al. (2023). The green divide and heat exposure: urban transformation projects in istanbul. (external link)
- Anger-Kraavi, Annela; Brisbois, Marie Claire; Cantoni, Roberto et al. (2025). Compounding injustices can impede a just energy transition | Nature Energy. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar (2024). Episodic populist backlashes against urban climate actions. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar; Abigail York; Kelli L. Larson (2022). Adaptation, exposure, and politics: Local extreme heat and global climate change risk perceptions in the phoenix metropolitan region, USA. (external link)
- Ozge Naz Pala; Irem Daloglu Cetinkaya; Mahir Yazar (2025). Urban Flood Exposure and Vulnerability: Insights From Pendik District of Istanbul. (external link)
- Mahir Yazar; Ece Baykal Fide; Irem Daloglu Cetinkaya (2023). The nested hierarchy of urban vulnerability within land use policies fails to address climate injustices in Turkey. (external link)
Academic book chapter
Academic literature review
See a complete overview of publications in Cristin.
Journal Articles (peer-reviewed)
22. Hermwille, L., Brisbois, M.C., Hiteva, R., Yazar, M. et al. Compounding injustices can impede a just energy transition. Nature Energy. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41560-025-01785-x
21. Yazar, M., Haarstad, H., Elfving, J. (2025). Cities incorporate equity in their climate policies, but overlook procedural justice in decision-making. Nature Cities. (2):1 https://doi.org/10.1038/s44284-024-00167-w
20. Pala, Ö.N., Daloğlu Çetinkaya, I. Yazar, M. (2025). Urban Flood Exposure and Vulnerability: Insights from Pendik District of Istanbul. Journal of Flood Risk Management. (18):1 https://doi.org/10.1111/jfr3.70000
19. Yazar, M. (2024). Episodic populist backlashes against urban climate actions. Urban Studies, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/00420980241237139
18. Yazar, M., Daloglu, I., Baykal, E., Haarstad, H. (2023). Diffusion of global climate policy: national depoliticization, local repoliticization in Turkey. Global Environmental Change, (81): 102699. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2023.102699
17. Yazar, M., Haarstad, H. (2023). Populist far right discursive-institutional tactics in European regional decarbonization. Political Geography, (105): 102936. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo.2023.102936
16. Yazar, M., Iban, M.C., S.S., Bilgilioglu. (2023). The Green Divide and Heat Exposure via Urban Transformation Projects in Istanbul. Frontiers in Environmental Science. https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2023.1265332
15. Yazar, M., Baykal, E., Daloglu, I. (2023). The nested hierarchy in urban vulnerability fails to address climate injustices in Turkey. Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning. https://doi.org/10.1080/1523908X.2023.2279059
14. Yazar, M., York, A. (2023). Nature-based solutions through collective actions for spatial justice in urban green commons. Environmental Science and Policy, 145, 228-237. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2023.04.016
13. Yazar, M., Hermwille, L., & Haarstad, H. (2022). Right-wing and populist support for climate mitigation policies: Evidence from Poland and its carbon-intensive Silesia region. Regional Sustainability, 3(4), 281-293. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.regsus.2022.11.001
12. Yazar, M. (2022). Norm domestication challenges for local climate actions: A lesson from Arizona, USA. Environmental Policy and Governance. https://10.1002/eet.2038
11. Yazar, M., Haarstad, H., Drengenes, LL., York, A. (2022). Governance learning from collective actions for just climate adaptation in cities. Frontiers in Sustainable Cities, 4. https://doi.org/10.3389/frsc.2022.932070
10. York, A., & Yazar, M. (2022). Leveraging Shadow Networks for Procedural Justice. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, 57. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cosust.2022.101190
9. Yazar, M., York, A., Larson, L.K. (2022). Adaptation, exposure, and politics. Local extreme heat and global climate change risk perceptions in the Phoenix Metropolita Region, USA. CITIES, 103763. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2022.103763
8. Daloglu-Cetinkaya, I., Yazar, M., Kilinc, S. & Guven, B. (2022). Urban climate resilience and water insecurity: future scenarios of water supply and demand in Istanbul. Urban Water Journal, 10.1080/1573062X.2022.2066548
7. Yazar, M., York, A.M. (2022). Disentangling justice as recognition through public support for local climate adaptation policies: Insights from the Southwest US. Urban Climate, Volume 41, 101079, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.uclim.2021.101079.
6. Yazar, M., York, A.M. (2021). Urban Climate Governance under the Central Government Shadow: Evidence from Istanbul. Journal of Urban Affairs. 1-17 https://doi.org/10.1080/07352166.2021.1915151
5. Yazar, M., York, A.M., Kyriakopoulos, G. (2021). Heat Exposure and the Climate Change Beliefs in a Desert City: The case of Phoenix Metropolitan Area. Urban Climate 36:100769. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.uclim.2020.100769
4. Yazar, M., Hestad, D., Mangalagiu, D., Thornton, T., Ma, Y., Saysel, A. (2020). Enabling Environment for Regime Destabilization toward Urban Transition in Megacities: Comparing Shanghai and Istanbul. Climatic Change 160(4): 727-752. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-020-02726-1
3. Yazar, M., Hestad, D., Mangalagiu, D., Saysel, A., Ma, Y., Thornton, T. (2019). Urban Transformation towards Sustainability or Planned Green Gentrification? Insight from urban renewal processes in Gaziosmanpasa, Istanbul. Climatic Change 160(4): 637-653. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-019-02509-3
2. Thornton, T., Mangalagiu, D., Ma, Y., Lan, J., Yazar, M., Saysel, A., Chaar, AM. (2019). Cultural models of and for urban sustainability: Assessing beliefs about Green-Win. Climatic Change 160(4): 521-537. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-019-02518-23
1. Kuokkanen, A. and Yazar, M. (2018). Cities in sustainability transitions: Comparing Helsinki and Istanbul. Sustainability 10(5):1421. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10051421
Book Chapters
1. Yazar, M. (2023). Environmental injustices unfold in urban sustainability projects in Istanbul. In Sustainability at Speed: Pathways through the climate emergency. (Eds.) Håvard Haarstad et al. UCL Press, London.
Projects
I have recently been awarded a grant from Brown University's Climate Social Science Network (https://cssn.org) as Principal Investigator. Starting in September 2024, I will lead a research team, including three Research Assistants, to explore the multi-level dimensions of backlash against energy transitions in the Baltic states (Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia). This research will focus on how various actors form networks of obstruction aimed at delaying clean energy investments at both the national and regional levels in these countries.
https://www.uib.no/en/cet/172189/baltic
Two externally funded-projects finalised:
Project 1: " Horizon2020 CINTRAN - Carbon Intensive Regions in Transition - Unravelling the Challenges of Structural Change." (Post-Doc), working on the politics of decarbonization, including quantitative assessments of voting patterns and policy narratives to explore the rise of populism and anti-democratic attitudes in the selected carbon-intensive regions of Estonia, Germany, Greece, and Poland.
Project 2: " LOCALNET - Local Climate Change Narratives and Networks in Turkey" (Co-PI) funded by Stiftung Wissenscharft und Politik (500,000.00 NOK) starting in February 2022.
LOCALNET | Centre for Climate and Energy Transformation (CET) | UiB