Global Climate Governance: Participation and Resistance - the Case of REDD+ and Swedish Environmental Organizations
Abstract
This study analyses contemporary global climate governance represented
by the case of REDD+, and how Swedish environmental movement
organizations (EMOs) participate and/or resist this governance. The aim of
the study is to provide a detailed account of contemporary global climate
governance and EMOs participation and/or resistance using the theoretical
perspective of governmentality, which gives the possibility to distinguish the
rationalities and technologies used in climate governance, and to identify
different levels of participation and resistance by the EMOs. The major rationality
identified in global climate governance is marketization that permeates
programme proposals. Marketization is understood as an expression of
advanced liberal governing, transforming political responsibilities into market
principles and emphasizing active, responsible and accountable actors in
the pursuit of personal fulfilment. Other important rationalities are scientization
and managerialization and all three rationalities are reciprocally connected.
The resistance of the EMOs is mostly directed against the marketization
of global climate governance, which is seen as a threat to political and
democratic influence. However, some of the EMOs resistance can simultaneously
be interpret as participation. By taking part in technocratic argumentations,
EMOs legitimatize and underpin the importance of certain forms of
knowledge and perspectives in global climate governance.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2015-01-13Author
Bertilsson, Jonas
Keywords
climate change
global governance
REDD+
governance
environmental organization
environmental movement
governmentality
power
resistance, participation
advanced liberal governing
neo-liberalism
management
science
technology
Language
eng