Borrowing trouble. Finding ways out of value systems discord for biodiversity policy-making
In: Innovation: the European journal of social science research, Band 31, Heft sup1, S. S101-S115
ISSN: 1469-8412
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In: Innovation: the European journal of social science research, Band 31, Heft sup1, S. S101-S115
ISSN: 1469-8412
In: Alternatives Économiques, Band 353, Heft 1, S. 63-63
In: Environmental science & policy, Band 113, S. 31-38
ISSN: 1462-9011
In: Land use policy: the international journal covering all aspects of land use, Band 79, S. 339-349
ISSN: 0264-8377
In: Terrains & travaux: cahiers du Département de Sciences Sociales de l'ENS de Cachan, Band 28, Heft 1, S. 85-107
ISSN: 1627-9506
Cet article retrace l'émergence et la mise à l'épreuve d'une définition spécifique des forêts, conçue pour opérationnaliser l'engagement « zéro déforestation » pris par certaines firmes consommatrices d'huile de palme en réponse aux pressions des ONG de conservation. Il montre que cette définition résulte d'un compromis entre grandeurs industrielle et « verte », rendu possible par une modification du rapport de force initial. Il montre ensuite que la transposition de cette définition de l'Indonésie au Libéria a permis de renforcer sa robustesse en la mettant à l'épreuve avec succès. Mesurer la forêt à l'aune de cette définition a deux types de conséquences. Si sur le plan social, elle tend à invisibiliser les attachements familiers des populations locales, l'usage de cette définition semble bien contribuer à une meilleure conservation des forêts. L'article conclut en replaçant l'émergence du HCS dans les transformations actuelles des modes de gouvernance internationale de l'environnement.
In: Politiques et management public: PMP, Band 22, Heft 1, S. 1-22
ISSN: 0758-1726, 2119-4831
In: Politiques et management public: PMP, Band 22, Heft 1, S. 1-22
ISSN: 0758-1726
Nouvelle version mise à jour en avril 2020. Titre de la première version : Forest spirits. What we know - and don't know - about the effectiveness of policies against deforestation [Mars 2019] ; Studies addressing the effectiveness of policies aiming at combatting deforestation have produced mixed results, showing no obvious and undebated correlations between a certain type of forest policy instrument and its success in preventing or deterring deforestation. Hence, why anti-deforestation policies succeed or not still remains unclear. This paper proposes a new reading grid of the effectiveness of anti-deforestation policies, by mapping the causal mechanisms at stake from its design to its objective of avoiding deforestation. 264 empirical evaluations are collected and reviewed in order to reveal the theory of change (ToC) that emerges from the current practice of forest policy evaluation. This mapping sheds light on the different causal steps necessary for anti-deforestation policies to be effective, and on the conditions at stake at the various stages of the causal chain, according to the existing literature. Doing so, it allows visualising the reasons for the success of anti-deforestation policies -or lack of, as per the literature corpus analysed. It also provides guidelines with regard to the elements of context to look at when designing and implementing such anti-deforestation policies. Finally, it exposes what is most researched by evaluators, as well as observes the main apparent evaluation blind spots.Our results highlight that the effectiveness of anti-deforestation policies is context-specific on political, economic, social, cultural, environmental and structural dimensions: The political willingness, the nature of available funding, the governance structure, the existence of forest-related traditions, the social and economic situation of local populations, and the nature and spatial scale of the deforestation drivers are elements that influence the success of the policy. They may play this role at ...
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Nouvelle version mise à jour en avril 2020. Titre de la première version : Forest spirits. What we know - and don't know - about the effectiveness of policies against deforestation [Mars 2019] ; Studies addressing the effectiveness of policies aiming at combatting deforestation have produced mixed results, showing no obvious and undebated correlations between a certain type of forest policy instrument and its success in preventing or deterring deforestation. Hence, why anti-deforestation policies succeed or not still remains unclear. This paper proposes a new reading grid of the effectiveness of anti-deforestation policies, by mapping the causal mechanisms at stake from its design to its objective of avoiding deforestation. 264 empirical evaluations are collected and reviewed in order to reveal the theory of change (ToC) that emerges from the current practice of forest policy evaluation. This mapping sheds light on the different causal steps necessary for anti-deforestation policies to be effective, and on the conditions at stake at the various stages of the causal chain, according to the existing literature. Doing so, it allows visualising the reasons for the success of anti-deforestation policies -or lack of, as per the literature corpus analysed. It also provides guidelines with regard to the elements of context to look at when designing and implementing such anti-deforestation policies. Finally, it exposes what is most researched by evaluators, as well as observes the main apparent evaluation blind spots.Our results highlight that the effectiveness of anti-deforestation policies is context-specific on political, economic, social, cultural, environmental and structural dimensions: The political willingness, the nature of available funding, the governance structure, the existence of forest-related traditions, the social and economic situation of local populations, and the nature and spatial scale of the deforestation drivers are elements that influence the success of the policy. They may play this role at different stages of the policy design and implementation: at decision-making stage, during its implementation, or when evaluating its results and outcomes. The majority of conditions reported from the literature concern the implementation phase, at the local level. In other words, according to evaluators, the success or failure of anti-deforestation policies mostly lies in its effective implementation in the field, i.e. in its ability to generate a social acceptance of and compliance to the policy rules. However, some studies also show that a successfully implemented policy does not avoid deforestation if the actual deforestation driver is not properly addressed, thus resulting in deforestation being displaced or unchanged. This underlines the importance of prior risk assessments and field studies to design an adapted policy instrument to combat deforestation.
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In: Innovation: the European journal of social science research, Band 31, Heft sup1, S. S78-S100
ISSN: 1469-8412
In: Marine policy, Band 49, S. 37-47
ISSN: 0308-597X
In: Marine policy: the international journal of ocean affairs, Band 49, S. 37-47
ISSN: 0308-597X