Fariborz Zelli
Professor | Principal Investigator BECC
Seeing the forest for the trees : Identifying discursive convergence and dominance in complex redd+ governance
Författare
Summary, in English
Scholars of international law and international relations largely agree that global governance today, and global environmental governance in particular, is marked by institutional complexity. Environmental policy fields are, to varying degrees, governed by a plurality of institutions with different levels of legalization, membership, and jurisdictional scope, and with different degrees of coherence among them. The international governance architecture on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) is a case in point. Located at the intersection of the governance systems on climate change, biodiversity, forestry, and development, REDD+ governance provides a stage where a large variety of intergovernmental and transnational institutions come together, collaborate, or compete on questions of standard-setting, financing, implementation, and evaluation. This complexity poses challenges to the effectiveness of REDD+ governance in general, but also to specific actor groups and organizations that lack the resources to understand and navigate such a fragmented governance landscape. Against this backdrop, we introduce an analytical framework to read and structure a complex governance architecture. The framework breaks new ground by adopting argumentative discourse analysis and the concept of storylines to the study of institutional complexity. We argue that beyond the messy surface of institutional complexity there may be a surprising degree of convergence, in the sense of discursive hierarchies that run across institutions, practices, and scales. We illustrate such a cross-cutting hierarchy for the complex REDD+ governance system, focusing on the sensitive issue of forest carbon monitoring. In our analysis of respective guidance documents and country reports, we find, underneath the institutional complexity across governance scales, a considerable dominance of techno-managerial perspectives and a preference for carbon commodification. This discursive hegemony and convergence resonates with the dominance of certain REDD+ funding institutions and the prioritization of the monitoring practice of remote sensing.
Avdelning/ar
- Statsvetenskapliga institutionen
- BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
- Centrum för miljö- och klimatvetenskap (CEC)
- Institutionen för naturgeografi och ekosystemvetenskap
Publiceringsår
2019
Språk
Engelska
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
Ecology and Society
Volym
24
Issue
1
Dokumenttyp
Artikel i tidskrift
Förlag
The Resilience Alliance
Ämne
- Environmental Sciences
- Political Science (excluding Public Administration Studies and Globalization Studies)
Nyckelord
- Discourse analysis
- Institutional complexity
- Institutional fragmentation
- Monitoring
- MRV
- National forest inventory
- REDD+
- Regime complex
- Remote sensing
- Safeguards
Aktiv
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt
- ISSN: 1708-3087