Maria Brockhaus, Monica Di Gregorio and Sofi Mardiah
Forest Policy and Economics
Forest Policy and Economics
This paper investigates how three aspects of governance systems, namely
the policy context, the influence of key agents and their discursive
practices, are affecting national-level processes of policy design aimed
at REDD +, reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation
in developing countries; and the role of conservation, sustainable
management of forests and enhancement of forest carbon stocks in
developing countries. We conducted analysis in six REDD + countries
(Brazil, Cameroon, Indonesia, Nepal, Papua New Guinea and Vietnam). The
paper combines three methods: policy analysis, media-based discourse
analysis and policy network analysis. The paper shows that policies both
within and outside the forestry sector that support deforestation and
forest degradation create path dependencies and entrenched interests
that hamper policy change. In addition, most dominant policy coalitions
do not challenge business-as-usual trajectories, reinforcing existing
policy and political structures. No minority policy coalitions are
directly tackling the root causes of deforestation and forest
degradation, that is, the politico-economic conditions driving them.
Instead they focus on environmental justice issues, such as calls for
increased participation of indigenous people in decision-making. Only in
two of the six countries are these transformational change coalitions
vocal enough to be heard, yet to exercise their agency effectively and
to support more substantial reforms, these coalitions would need the
participation of more influential policy actors, particularly state
agencies that have the authority to make binding decisions about policy.
Furthermore, discourses supporting transformational change would need
to be reflected in institutional practices and policy decisions.
Download full paper: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1389934113001482