Seeking optimality in climate change agri-food policies: stakeholder perspectives from Western Europe
In: Climate policy, Band 17, Heft sup1, S. S72-S92
ISSN: 1752-7457
57 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Climate policy, Band 17, Heft sup1, S. S72-S92
ISSN: 1752-7457
In: Globalizations, Band 11, Heft 3, S. 385-400
ISSN: 1474-774X
In: International environmental agreements: politics, law and economics, Band 14, Heft 1, S. 1-3
ISSN: 1573-1553
In: Innovation: the European journal of social science research, Band 26, Heft 3, S. 231-250
ISSN: 1469-8412
In: Marine policy, Band 38, S. 124-132
ISSN: 0308-597X
In: Marine policy: the international journal of ocean affairs, Band 38, S. 124-132
ISSN: 0308-597X
In: Business and politics: B&P, Band 12, Heft 3, S. 1-34
ISSN: 1469-3569
This paper investigates the creation and consequences of private regulation in global food governance. It points to the power to govern and the authority to govern as the two crucial conditions for the emergence and diffusion of private food regulation. More specifically, the paper argues that the power to govern is a function of the structural power of agrifood corporations, particularly retail food corporations in our case. The authority to govern is a function of the perceived legitimacy of retail food corporations as political actors. By linking power and authority to the material and ideational structures existing in the global political economy of food, this paper analyses the processes that serve to create, maintain and reproduce private regulation in food governance. With its analysis, the paper aims to contribute to the theoretical and empirical debates on private authority, private regulation and the challenges for sustainability in the global food system.
In: Business and Politics (Berkeley), Band 12, Heft 3, S. 10-11
Lebensmittelkrisen wie BSE, die Maul- und Klauenseuche oder die Geflügelpest haben die Nachfrage nach mehr Transparenz in den komplexen und hoch industrialisierten Lebensmittelketten zu einem Eckpunkt der politischen Diskussion gemacht. Während Transparenz eine intuitiv wünschenswerte Norm darstellt, ist die Ausführung und die Umsetzung einer entsprechenden Politik jedoch eine komplexe und hochpolitische Aufgabe. Der vorliegende Beitrag untersucht das politische Potential für eine aus der Perspektive der Nachhaltigkeit angemessene Transparenzpolitik in der Europäischen Union. Basierend auf einer Policy-Netzwerk Analyse zur Schweinefleischpolitik in der Europäischen Union sowie zweien ihrer Mitgliedsstaaten zeigt er, dass die derzeitigen Kommunikations- und Vertrauensbeziehungen in den relevanten Netzwerken gegen eine Entwicklung einer derartigen Politik sprechen. Insbesondere die Einbindung der relevanten öffentlichen Akteure in Kommunikations- und Vertrauenscluster mit den wirtschaftlichen Akteuren, die eine sehr begrenzte Transparenzpolitik befürworten, und die gleichzeitige Isolation der Verbraucher-, Umwelt- und Tierschutzverbände im Netzwerk weisen darauf hin, dass das politische Potenzial für die Nachhaltigkeit fördernde Transparenzpolitik sehr begrenzt ist.
BASE
In: Routledge international handbooks
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- Acknowledgements -- List of abbreviations -- List of contributors -- Introduction: critical and transformative perspectives on global sustainability governance -- PART 1 Conceptual lenses -- 1 Power and legitimacy -- 2 Environmental governance as performance -- 3 Engaging the everyday: sustainability as resonance -- 4 Materiality and nonhuman agency -- 5 Worlding global sustainability governance -- PART 2 Ethics, principles, and debates -- 6 Justice -- 7 Representation of future generations -- 8 The 'good life' and Protected Needs -- 9 Post-Eurocentric sustainability governance: lessons from the Latin American Buen Vivir experiment -- 10 Responsibility -- 11 Religion -- 12 Sufficiency -- PART 3 Key challenges -- 13 North-South inequity and global environmental governance -- 14 Growth and development -- 15 The mining dilemma -- 16 Financialising nature -- 17 Environmental countermovements: organised opposition to climate change action in the United States -- 18 A critique of techno-optimism: efficiency without sufficiency is lost -- 19 Consumer values and consumption -- 20 The population challenge -- PART 4 Transformative approaches -- 21 Beyond magical thinking -- 22 Democracy in the Anthropocene -- 23 Living well within limits: the vision of consumption corridors -- 24 Beyond GDP: the economics of well-being -- 25 Beyond a-growth: sustainable zero growth -- 26 Work-time reduction for sustainable lifestyles -- 27 Decarbonisation -- 28 Localism, sharing, and care -- Conclusion: global sustainability governance - really? -- Index.
In: Routledge international handbooks
In: Routledge International Handbooks Ser.
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- Acknowledgements -- List of abbreviations -- List of contributors -- Introduction: critical and transformative perspectives on global sustainability governance -- PART 1 Conceptual lenses -- 1 Power and legitimacy -- 2 Environmental governance as performance -- 3 Engaging the everyday: sustainability as resonance -- 4 Materiality and nonhuman agency -- 5 Worlding global sustainability governance -- PART 2 Ethics, principles, and debates -- 6 Justice -- 7 Representation of future generations -- 8 The 'good life' and Protected Needs -- 9 Post-Eurocentric sustainability governance: lessons from the Latin American Buen Vivir experiment -- 10 Responsibility -- 11 Religion -- 12 Sufficiency -- PART 3 Key challenges -- 13 North-South inequity and global environmental governance -- 14 Growth and development -- 15 The mining dilemma -- 16 Financialising nature -- 17 Environmental countermovements: organised opposition to climate change action in the United States -- 18 A critique of techno-optimism: efficiency without sufficiency is lost -- 19 Consumer values and consumption -- 20 The population challenge -- PART 4 Transformative approaches -- 21 Beyond magical thinking -- 22 Democracy in the Anthropocene -- 23 Living well within limits: the vision of consumption corridors -- 24 Beyond GDP: the economics of well-being -- 25 Beyond a-growth: sustainable zero growth -- 26 Work-time reduction for sustainable lifestyles -- 27 Decarbonisation -- 28 Localism, sharing, and care -- Conclusion: global sustainability governance - really? -- Index.
In: International environmental agreements: politics, law and economics, Band 22, Heft 2, S. 245-262
ISSN: 1573-1553
AbstractThis review article addresses the question: What lessons can we learn from work published in International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics regarding the politics of multilateral environmental agreements? What are the implications of these lessons for those responsible for creating and administering these agreements? Based on an analysis of 147 articles published over the past 20 years, the article explores issues of institutional design, institutional politics, implementation, and effectiveness. It concludes that key conditions for success in this realm include: (a) developing a toolkit that is not limited to rules-based governance, (b) paying attention to matters of implementation, (c) bearing in mind the overall regime complex, (d) developing effective leadership based on credibility and accountability, and (e) allowing for institutional adaptation.
This review article addresses the question: What lessons can we learn from work published in International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics regarding the politics of multilateral environmental agreements? What are the implications of these lessons for those responsible for creating and administering these agreements? Based on an analysis of 147 articles published over the past 20 years, the article explores issues of institutional design, institutional politics, implementation, and effectiveness. It concludes that key conditions for success in this realm include: (a) developing a toolkit that is not limited to rules-based governance, (b) paying attention to matters of implementation, (c) bearing in mind the overall regime complex, (d) developing effective leadership based on credibility and accountability, and (e) allowing for institutional adaptation.
BASE
We explore the relevance of structural characteristics of policy networks for policy outcomes, thereby highlighting the continuing relevance of the policy network approach for policy analysis. Focusing on networks for transparency in the food chain in the Netherlands and the EU, we examine the proposition that network interactions in the form of communication and trust make a substantial difference in the estimation and explanation of transparency policy. Thereby, we identify existing obstacles to a successful transformation of the norm of transparency into appropriate political frameworks and governance mechanisms as well as potential steps for improvement. Data were gathered in structured interviews with the network actors in the Netherlands and at the EU level and are employed in a mathematical model allowing us to highlight the impact of communication and trust relationships on policy output.
BASE