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The World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg
2002 was the latest conference in an international process to
manage environment and development issues that can be traced back
to the late 1960s. Three milestones mark this 30-year process of
social and political interaction: the United Nations Conference on
the Human Environment (UNCHE), held in Stockholm in 1972, the first
international meeting at a high political level convened to address
environmental issues; the 1992 United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development (UNCED), held in Rio de Janeiro; and
the WSSD, which attempted to set policy goals and targets for the
global environmental and developmental challenges previously
identified. But what did the WSSD achieve? Following the summit
there have been various opinions of its significance and its
outputs, many of them negative. This book argues that there is a
need to place the WSSD in its broader context. Understanding the
connections between the WSSD and its precedents as well as those
between this overall process and individual environmental
decision-making processes (such as on climate change), and how they
all contribute to the overall global policy process, adds a
critical dimension to the analysis of the WSSD outcomes. This book
examines the challenges facing the global policy process for
sustainable development as it continues beyond Johannesburg into
the future. It combines a forward outlook with a historical
perspective in tracing the evolution of selected cross-cutting
themes on the agenda of the three conferences, the institutions and
formal results of the process, and the actors and their patterns of
interaction over time. The focus is on the decision-making
dimension - the multilateral negotiations-which can be seen as the
development over time of a pattern of interlinked political
activities. Global Challenges has four operational objectives:
first, to define the ongoing process that formally began with the
Stockholm Conference in 1972 and evolved towards its latest major
manifestation at the WSSD; second, to present some dynamics of the
Stockholm-Rio-Johannesburg (SRJ) process by exploring the themes
identified; third, to introduce an approach on how to consider the
outcomes of this process as a way of reflecting on what the process
has actually accomplished; and, finally, to discuss lessons learned
for theory and practice from this exercise. The practical lessons
include reflections on how the continued SRJ process should best be
organised and supported into the future. The book takes a uniquely
broad outlook and interdisciplinary approach in addressing
important lessons relating to the emergence of substantive issues
as well as to process and institutional dynamics. It is a
bridge-building exercise from academic analysis to long-term
strategic thinking in environmental regime building. Global
Challenges provides a new perspective on the continuing and
increasingly complex global environment and development policy
process and analyses the interlinkages between the process, trends
and cross-cutting issues that set the conditions for the global
efforts to achieve sustainable development. It will be essential
reading for academics and practitioners interested in seeing the
big picture of the global challenges facing people and planet in
the 21st century.
Provides an analytical framework for assessing the impact of NGOs
on intergovernmental negotiations on the environment and
identifying the factors that determine the degree of NGO influence,
with case studies that apply the framework to negotiations on
climate change, biosafety, desertification, whaling, and forests.
Over the past thirty years nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)
have played an increasingly influential role in international
negotiations, particularly on environmental issues. NGO diplomacy
has become, in the words of one organizer, an "international
experiment in democratizing intergovernmental decision making." But
there has been little attempt to determine the conditions under
which NGOs make a difference in either the process or the outcome
of international negotiations. This book presents an analytic
framework for the systematic and comparative study of NGO diplomacy
in international environmental negotiations. Chapters by experts on
international environmental policy apply this framework to assess
the effect of NGO diplomacy on specific negotiations on
environmental and sustainability issues. The proposed analytical
framework offers researchers the tools with which to assess whether
and how NGO diplomats affect negotiation processes, outcomes, or
both, and through comparative analysis the book identifies factors
that explain variation in NGO influence, including coordination of
strategy, degree of access, institutional overlap, and alliances
with key states. The empirical chapters use the framework to
evaluate the degree of NGO influence on the first phase of the
Kyoto Protocol negotiations on global climate change, the Cartagena
Protocol on Biosafety, the United Nations Convention to Combat
Desertification, negotiations within the International Whaling
Commission that resulted in new management procedures and a ban on
commercial whaling, and international negotiations on forests
involving the United Nations, the International Tropical Timber
Organization, and the World Trade Organization. Contributors
Steinar Andresen, Michele M. Betsill, Stanley W. Burgiel, Elisabeth
Corell, David Humphreys, Tora Skodvin
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