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- Date submitted: 29 Oct 2011
- Stakeholder type: Major Group
- Name: Earth System Governance Project
- Submission Document: Download
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rio+20 policy brief
Transforming governance and institutions for a planet under pressure
Revitalizing the institutional framework for global sustainability: Key Insights from social science research
Global environmental protection has featured high on the international political agenda since the United
Nations (UN) Conference on the Human Environment in 1972. Yet, despite more than 900 environmental
treaties coming into force over the past 40 years, human-induced environmental degradation is reaching
unprecedented levels. Human societies must change course and steer away from critical tipping points in
the earth system that might lead to rapid and irreversible change, while ensuring sustainable livelihoods for
all. This requires a fundamental transformation of existing practices. If we are to achieve more sustainable
development in the future, we have to reorient and restructure our national and international institutions and
governance mechanisms. Incrementalism will not suffice to bring about societal change at the level required;
the world needs structural change in global governance.
The 2012 UN Conference on Sustainable Development must become a major stepping stone towards
introducing a stronger institutional framework for sustainable development. We urge decision makers to
seize this opportunity to develop a clear and ambitious roadmap for institutional change and bring about
fundamental reform of current sustainability governance within the next decade. This policy brief outlines the
core areas needing most urgent action.
Summary of key points and policy recommendations
- Strengthen international
environmental treaties:
Governments must engage
in structural reforms in how
international environmental
negotiations are conducted and
treaties designed. Present and
future treaties must rely more
on systems of qualified majority
voting in specified areas.
- Manage conflicts among
multilateral agreements:
International economic
institutions must advance
transitions to a sustainable
economy, including by
multilaterally harmonized
systems that allow for
discriminating between
products on the basis of
production processes, based
on multilateral agreement.
Global trade and investment
regimes must be embedded
in a normative context of
social, developmental, and
environmental values.
- Fill regulatory gaps in
international sustainability
governance: New or
strengthened international
regulatory frameworks are
needed in several areas,
including on emerging
technologies, water, food, and
energy.
- Upgrade UNEP: Governments
need to engage in negotiations
for the up-grading of UNEP
to a specialized UN agency,
along the lines of the World
Health Organization or
the International Labour
Organization.
- Better integrate sustainable
development policies within
the UN system: Governments
need to support overall
integrative mechanisms within
the UN system that better
align the social, economic
and environmental pillars of
sustainable development.
- Strengthen national
governance: New policy
instruments are a promising
complement to regulation if
carefully designed. But they are
not panaceas.
- Streamline and strengthen
public?private governance
networks and partnerships:
The CSD and other bodies
need a stronger mandate and
better methodologies for the
verification and monitoring
of partnerships. Despite the
growing role of non-state
actors, there is still a strong
need for effective and decisive
governmental action.
- Strengthen accountability and
legitimacy: Novel accountability
mechanisms are needed,
including mandatory disclosure
of accessible, comprehensible
and comparable data about
government and corporate
sustainability performance.
Stronger consultative rights for
civil society representatives in
intergovernmental institutions
should be introduced.
- Address equity concerns within
and among countries: Equity
concerns must be at the heart
of the institutional framework
for sustainable development.
High consumption levels in
industrialized countries and
in some parts of the emerging
economies require special
and urgent action. Financial
transfers from richer to poorer
countries are inevitable,
either through direct support
payments for mitigation and
adaptation programmes or
through international market
mechanisms, for example
global emissions markets.
- Prepare global governance
for a warmer world: Global
adaptation programmes need
to become a core concern of the
UN system and governments.
-
STRENGTHEN INTERNATIONAL
ENVIRONMENTAL TREATIES
Recent research on factors
that foster the creation and
effectiveness of international
environmental treaties has
led to important insights into
how to improve the international
governance system. International
treaties are most effective when they:
- state precise goals, criteria
and benchmarks for assessing
progress;
- are designed to be flexible and
adaptable to changes in the
problem and context;
- have formal procedures to ensure
new scientific information is
taken up quickly; and
- systematically collect information
about the effectiveness of the
treaty and review this information
regularly.
Governments can also speed up
treaty negotiations by conducting
them within existing institutions
and by breaking down problems
into smaller negotiation packages.
Negotiators can sometimes sacrifice
substance and stringency to reach
?shallow? but inclusive agreements
that can be built on later; e.g.,
through framework-plus-protocol
approaches, tacit-acceptance
procedures for amendments, and
formalized mechanisms that help
develop soft law agreements into
hard law. Such measures will lead to
an incremental improvement of the
system of international environmental
agreements. We urge governments
to draw on the lessons of past treatymaking
exercises to improve their
functioning.
While incremental change is
important, it is not sufficient. More
transformative reform is needed
urgently. Introducing a stronger
reliance on qualified majority
voting would be a positive step,
since political systems that rely on
majority-based rule are quicker to
arrive at far-reaching decisions. At
the international level, experiences
with qualified majority voting are
rare and will need to be restricted to
clearly specified areas to ensure the
support of all countries. One route
is the double-weighted majority
voting developed in the treaties on
stratospheric ozone depletion, which
accept majority decisions yet also
grant veto power to North and South
as groups of countries.
MANAGE CONFLICTS AMONG
MULTILATERAL AGREEMENTS
Conflict among different
treaties ? both within
sustainability policy and
beyond ? has recently
become a major concern.
Here, governments must
strengthen the capacity and
mandate of environmental treaties
(including their secretariats)
to collect, disseminate and
exchange information on links
with other treaties. Treaties with
similar objectives need formal
mechanisms for joint negotiation and management. Furthermore, the
requirement to respect and support
the objectives of (other) multilateral
environmental treaties should be
accepted as a general principle.
It is particularly important to manage
conflicts between economic and
environmental treaties, with reforms
of the institutional framework for
sustainable development brought
in line with the ideal of the ?green
economy?. Environmental goals must
be mainstreamed into the activities of global economic institutions,
while global trade and investment
regimes need to be embedded
in a normative context of social,
developmental and environmental
values. Discriminating in world trade
law between products on the basis
of production processes is critical, if
investments in cleaner products and
services are to be encouraged. Such
discrimination should be based on
multilateral agreement to prevent
protectionist impacts.
Fill regulat ory gaps in internat ional
susta inability governance
In addition to strengthening
existing treaties, there are
numerous areas where new
frameworks are needed.
One is the development and
deployment of such technologies
as nanotechnology, synthetic
biology and geoengineering. These
emerging technologies promise
significant benefits, but also
pose major risks for sustainable
development. They therefore
need an international institutional
framework to support forecasting,
transparency and information-sharing
on new technologies; further develop technical standards; help clarify the
applicability of existing treaties;
promote public discussion and input;
and engage multiple stakeholders in
policy dialogues. Such a framework
must ensure that environmental
considerations are fully respected.
Initially, multilateral action on
emerging technologies could take
the form of one or more framework
conventions.
Global water governance also
needs a stronger and more
coherent multilateral framework,
since it remains the remit of several UN agencies and civil
society organizations. Global food
governance must be strengthend
as well. Regulatory challenges here
include international management
of food safety and nutrition, the
coordination of climate change
adaptation in food systems, limits
on commodity speculation, and
standards to guide private regulation
such as certification and labeling
schemes. Furthermore, energy
governance requires strong oversight
by global bodies whose activities
are currently dispersed and poorly
coordinated.
Upgrade
UNEP and
UNCSD
International environmental
organizations play vital roles
in governance for sustainable
development, but need further
strengthening. Many reform
proposals have been submitted
in recent decades. Some of the
more radical proposals ? such
as an international agency that
centralizes and integrates existing
intergovernmental organizations
and regimes ? are unlikely to be
implemented and would yield
uncertain gains. However, most of us
see substantial benefits in upgrading
the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP) to a specialized
UN agency for environmental protection, along the lines of the
World Health Organization or the
International Labour Organization.
At the same time, it is important
to increase the integration of
sustainable development policy
within the UN system and beyond.
The UN Commission on Sustainable
Development (UNCSD) was created
to fulfil this role, but its political relevance has remained limited.
Governments must take action to
support mechanisms within the UN
system that will improve integration
of the social, economic and
environmental pillars of sustainable
development. An upgraded,
strengthened CSD that includes
meaningful participation from all
branches of government, is one route
to consider.
Strengthen nat ional
governance
?When designed carefully, new policy instruments are
a promising complement to regulation,
but they are not panaceas.?
The shortcomings of
international institutions
largely reflect those of
domestic policies. An
effective institutional
framework for sustainable
development requires critical
institutional innovations at
the national level. New policy
instruments ? often involving nonstate
actors ? have become popular
as a means of overcoming problems
in implementing regulations, since they are often seen as being
more flexible. However, questions
remain about their transparency,
equity implications and long-term
effectiveness. When designed
carefully, new policy instruments
are a promising complement
to regulation, but they are not
panaceas. Success lies in developing
packages of different instruments,
and in evaluating the effectiveness of
these in their own terms as well as in
relation to alternative options.
Streamline and strengthen
public?privat e governance
networks and partnerships
?...few of the 300-plus partnerships for sustainable development formed
around the 2002 Johannesburg Summit have delivered on their promise...?
The past few decades have seen
tremendous growth in new
types of governance, such as
public?private partnerships
or transnational labelling
schemes. Yet the effectiveness of these
novel mechanisms remains uncertain.
Research indicates that few of the
300-plus partnerships for sustainable
development formed around the
2002 Johannesburg Summit have
delivered on their promise. Overall,
the partnership approach has not met its expectations in contributing
to the Millennium Development
Goals and furthering participation
and implementation. Insufficient
funding, ineffective organizational
structures, lack of quantitative targets
and weak accountability systems
have also limited its effectiveness. To
strengthen such partnerships, UNCSD
and other agencies need a stronger
mandate and better methodologies
for the verification and monitoring of
progress.
Labelling and certification schemes
can advance sustainable development
by enabling markets to support
environmentally sound business
practices. To be effective, these need
multiple stakeholders, appropriate
national regulatory frameworks,
built-in accountability mechanisms
and consumer demand. Governments
play a crucial role through
regulations that create incentives for
certification, focused procurement
policies, legitimization of measures and involvement in monitoring
sustainability effects. International
organizations can also play a
powerful role in catalyzing novel
forms of private and public?private
governance.
Novel mechanisms such as the
Clean Development Mechanism
or Reducing Emissions from
Deforestation and Forest Degradation
(REDD) can contribute to sustainable
development when they are seen
as supplementary to, rather than a
replacement for, governmental action.
To ensure equitable distribution
of benefits and to minimize the
risks associated with them (e.g. to
indigenous people or biodiversity),
international, national and local
bodies must have strong institutional
oversight. Governments must work
towards improving institutional
capacity, increasing representation
of local stakeholders, changing
the uneven monitoring of claimed
benefits, and rebalancing global and
local benefits.
New types of transnational
cooperation among local public
authorities (e.g. cities) are becoming
important and many such
authorities have taken significant
action towards addressing the
causes and consequences of global
environmental risks. Governments
must provide a political mandate that
recognizes their diverse contexts and
guides practical action on the ground
as well as supporting collaboration
and developing local capacity and
financial resources.
Despite the growing role of nonstate
actors, there is still a need for
effective and decisive governmental
action, both at the national and
intergovernmental level. Governance
beyond the state can be a useful
supplement but still requires
governmental support.
Strengthen
accounta bility and
legitimacy
?...governance accountability can be strengthened
when stakeholders gain better access
to information and decision-making...?
Both intergovernmental and
novel non-state-driven
institutions face increasing
pressures for improved
accountability and access to
decision making. There is no universal
formula to increase accountability
and legitimacy across all sustainable
development institutions. In general,
governance accountability can be
strengthened when stakeholders
gain better access to information
and decision-making, for example
through special rights enshrined in
agreements, charters and codes, and
stronger participation in councils that
govern resources, or in commissions
that hear complaints. International
environmental, developmental and
economic institutions must adopt
such novel accountability mechanisms
more widely. Stronger consultative
rights for civil society representatives
in intergovernmental institutions
can be a major step forward. This requires appropriate mechanisms
that account for imbalances between
countries and for power differentials
between different segments of civil
society, and that ensure appropriate
accountability mechanisms for civil
society representatives vis-ŕ-vis their
constituencies.
While greater transparency and
information disclosure can empower
citizens and consumers to hold
governments and private actors
accountable as well as providing
incentives for better sustainability
performance, transparency does
not always deliver on its promises.
Disclosed information is often
inaccessible, inconsistent or
incomprehensible. Governments
and private actors must ensure that
disclosure obligations go beyond
?business as usual? to stimulate a
change in existing unsustainable
practices.
Address equity concerns within and
among countries
The institutional framework
for sustainable development
must address questions
of justice, fairness and
equity. Regarding equity
within countries, there may be a
trade-off between effectiveness/
efficiency and equity. However, this
presents a false dichotomy in most
complex environmental problems,
which are inherently political in
nature. Legitimate and transparent
democratic processes are needed
to allow societies and communities
to choose policies they see as being
equitable and effective.
Poor and marginalized communities
are most vulnerable to global
environmental change but seldom
have a voice in policymaking.
Relevant processes should therefore
promote participation of the poor in
policy preparation, implementation,
monitoring and adaptation.
At the international level, equity
and fairness need to be at the heart
of strong and durable international
regimes. Equitable progress towards
globally sustainable development
requires greater action by the richer
nations. In particular, governments
and societies in industrialized
countries need to accept that
global environmental change has
fundamentally increased global
interdependence and (further)
transformed the international system.
Also the rapidly industrializing
countries in the South need to
actively determine their role and
position on sustainable development
governance and to direct their
development pathways towards a
green economy.
Overall, financial transfers from richer
to poorer countries at unprecedented
levels are inevitable, either through
direct support payments for mitigation
and adaptation programmes based on
international agreement or through
such mechanisms as global emissions
markets. Novel financial mechanisms
like transnational air transportation
levies for sustainability purposes could
also contribute.
The organization of global funding
for sustainable development lacks
consistency and inclusiveness,
with most funding agencies having
different interests, rules and general
policies. Policy coherence is often
weak. Governments and funding
agencies need to revisit existing
funding mechanisms to increase
policy coherence and strengthen the
voice of the recipient countries.
Prepare global governance for
a warmer world
Complete mitigation of global
environmental change is
already out of reach, so the
new institutional framework
for sustainable development
must include governance for
adaptation. Research indicates that
the adaptability of local communities
is stronger when the governance
system itself is adaptive. Institutional
frameworks with multiple centres
and levels of authority may foster
the adaptive capacities required.
Strong informal networks and
public participation in planning,
implementation and review are all
important and governments and
international institutions should
support adaptability in local
governance mechanisms.
At the global level, the institutional
framework seems ill prepared
to cope with the consequences
of massive global change that
will affect such major systems as
food, water, energy, health and
Migration, and their interactions.
While massive changes, for example
in sea level, may not be imminent,
future dangers can be minimized if
institutional reform is planned and
negotiated today. Global adaptation
programmes thus need to become a
core concern of the UN system and
governments.
Conclusion
?We need to have a ?constitutional moment?
in world politics...?
We need to have a
?constitutional moment?
in world politics, akin to
the major transformative
shift in governance after
1945 that led to the establishment
of the United Nations and numerous
other international organizations,
along with far-reaching new
international legal norms on human
rights and economic cooperation.
The 2012 Rio+20 Conference offers
both an opportunity and a crucial
test as to whether such conferences
can bring about substantial and
urgently needed change in the current
institutional framework for sustainable
development.
Compiled by:
The Earth System Governance Project.
Lead author: Frank Biermann
Contributing authors: Kenneth
Abbott, Steinar Andresen, Karin
Bäckstrand, Steven Bernstein, Michele
M. Betsill, Harriet Bulkeley, Benjamin
Cashore, Jennifer Clapp, Carl Folke,
Aarti Gupta, Joyeeta Gupta, Peter
M. Haas, Andrew Jordan, Norichika
Kanie, Tatiana Kluvánková-Oravská,
Louis Lebel, Diana Liverman, James
Meadowcroft, Ronald B. Mitchell,
Peter Newell, Sebastian Oberthür,
Lennart Olsson, Philipp Pattberg,
Roberto Sánchez-Rodríguez, Heike
Schroeder, Arild Underdal, Susana
Camargo Vieira, Coleen Vogel and
Oran R. Young.
Assessment Managers: Ruben
Zondervan and Andrea Brock.
A longer and fully referenced version
of this Policy Brief is available at:
www.earthsystemgovernance.org/ifsd.
The Earth System Governance
Project is a ten-year research
initiative under the auspices of the
International Human Dimensions
Programme on Global Environmental
Change, which is sponsored by the
International Council for Science
(ICSU), the International Social
Science Council (ISSC), and the United
Nations University. The Earth System
Governance Project involves about
1700 colleagues along with a core
network of twelve institutions in
the Global Alliance of Earth System
Governance Research Centres
(www.earthsystemgovernance.org).