Messiness of forest governance: How technical approaches suppress politics in REDD+ and conservation projects

Reduction of Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) was originally conceived to address the global problem of climate change by reducing deforestation and forest degradation at national and subnational levels in developing countries. Since its inception, REDD+ proponents have in...

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Main Authors: Myers, R., Larson, A.M., Ravikumar, A., Kowler, L.F., Yang, A.L., Trench, T.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/112227
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author Myers, R.
Larson, A.M.
Ravikumar, A.
Kowler, L.F.
Yang, A.L.
Trench, T.
author_browse Kowler, L.F.
Larson, A.M.
Myers, R.
Ravikumar, A.
Trench, T.
Yang, A.L.
author_facet Myers, R.
Larson, A.M.
Ravikumar, A.
Kowler, L.F.
Yang, A.L.
Trench, T.
author_sort Myers, R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Reduction of Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) was originally conceived to address the global problem of climate change by reducing deforestation and forest degradation at national and subnational levels in developing countries. Since its inception, REDD+ proponents have increasingly had to adapt global ideas to local demands, as the rollout process was met with on-the-ground realities, including suspicion and protest. As is typical in aid or ‘development’ projects conceived in the global North, most of the solutions advanced to improve REDD+ tend to focus on addressing issues of justice (or ‘fairness’) in distributive terms, rather than addressing more inherently political objections to REDD+ such as those based on rights or social justice. Using data collected from over 700 interviews in five countries with both REDD+ and non-REDD+ cases, we argue that the failure to incorporate political notions of justice into conservation projects such as REDD+ results in ‘messiness’ within governance systems, which is a symptom of injustice and illegitimacy. We find that, first, conservation, payment for ecosystem services, and REDD+ project proponents viewed problems through a technical rather than political lens, leading to solutions that focused on procedures, such as ‘benefit distribution.’ Second, focusing on the technical aspects of interventions came at the expense of political solutions such as the representation of local people’s concerns and recognition of their rights. Third, the lack of attention to representation and recognition justices resulted in illegitimacy. This led to messiness in the governance systems, which was often addressed in technical terms, thereby perpetuating the problem. If messiness is not appreciated and addressed from appropriate notions of justice, projects such as REDD+ are destined to fail.
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spelling CGSpace1122272024-08-30T19:36:47Z Messiness of forest governance: How technical approaches suppress politics in REDD+ and conservation projects Myers, R. Larson, A.M. Ravikumar, A. Kowler, L.F. Yang, A.L. Trench, T. conservation forest management climate change environmental legislation Reduction of Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) was originally conceived to address the global problem of climate change by reducing deforestation and forest degradation at national and subnational levels in developing countries. Since its inception, REDD+ proponents have increasingly had to adapt global ideas to local demands, as the rollout process was met with on-the-ground realities, including suspicion and protest. As is typical in aid or ‘development’ projects conceived in the global North, most of the solutions advanced to improve REDD+ tend to focus on addressing issues of justice (or ‘fairness’) in distributive terms, rather than addressing more inherently political objections to REDD+ such as those based on rights or social justice. Using data collected from over 700 interviews in five countries with both REDD+ and non-REDD+ cases, we argue that the failure to incorporate political notions of justice into conservation projects such as REDD+ results in ‘messiness’ within governance systems, which is a symptom of injustice and illegitimacy. We find that, first, conservation, payment for ecosystem services, and REDD+ project proponents viewed problems through a technical rather than political lens, leading to solutions that focused on procedures, such as ‘benefit distribution.’ Second, focusing on the technical aspects of interventions came at the expense of political solutions such as the representation of local people’s concerns and recognition of their rights. Third, the lack of attention to representation and recognition justices resulted in illegitimacy. This led to messiness in the governance systems, which was often addressed in technical terms, thereby perpetuating the problem. If messiness is not appreciated and addressed from appropriate notions of justice, projects such as REDD+ are destined to fail. 2018-05 2021-03-08T08:22:04Z 2021-03-08T08:22:04Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/112227 en Open Access Elsevier Myers, R., Larson, A.M., Ravikumar, A., Kowler, L.F., Yang, A.L., Trench, T. 2018. Messiness of forest governance: How technical approaches suppress politics in REDD+ and conservation projects. Global Environmental Change, 50: 314-324. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2018.02.015
spellingShingle conservation
forest management
climate change
environmental legislation
Myers, R.
Larson, A.M.
Ravikumar, A.
Kowler, L.F.
Yang, A.L.
Trench, T.
Messiness of forest governance: How technical approaches suppress politics in REDD+ and conservation projects
title Messiness of forest governance: How technical approaches suppress politics in REDD+ and conservation projects
title_full Messiness of forest governance: How technical approaches suppress politics in REDD+ and conservation projects
title_fullStr Messiness of forest governance: How technical approaches suppress politics in REDD+ and conservation projects
title_full_unstemmed Messiness of forest governance: How technical approaches suppress politics in REDD+ and conservation projects
title_short Messiness of forest governance: How technical approaches suppress politics in REDD+ and conservation projects
title_sort messiness of forest governance how technical approaches suppress politics in redd and conservation projects
topic conservation
forest management
climate change
environmental legislation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/112227
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