Post on 11-Nov-2014
description
Climate change governance and institutions research contributing towards development outcomes
Governance & Institutions Across Scales in Climate Resilient Food SystemsBrussels Workshop – September 9, 2014
Mark Purdon, PhD
Department of International Development & GRILondon School of Economicsm.purdon@lse.ac.uk
Outline
• Research Challenges Ahead• The Importance of Comparative Politics• Domestic Governance Factors
– Institutions– Interests– Ideas
• Integrating International and Domestic Politics• Example of Climate Finance Governance in East Africa • Catalyzing Research on Climate Governance at the CCAFS • Conclusion
Research Challenges Ahead
• Near exclusive focus on institutions– Tendency in the existing literature towards normative analysis of
governance that privileges institutions over other political factors
• Preponderance of case-study research– Too much of the existing research into climate change adaptation
and food security has been comprised of unstructured, single case-studies
• Dependent Variable Problem– Little consensus about what the outcome of adaptation policy
should be nor how to measure it
The Importance of Comparative Politics
• Comparative politics is emerging as an exciting new approach for the study of global environmental issues– Should be seen as a compliment to recent research into climate
change politics that has focused on transnational, non-state actors and multi-scalar climate governance
• Positivist Epistemology– Comparativists explicitly seek to tie observations “to more general
ideas about politics”– Seeks to predict political behaviour and produce tractable policy
recommendations
• Comparative Methods– Comparison is one of the basic scientific methods of discovering
empirical relationships among variables in the effort to establish general propositions
3 Groups of Political Factors Important in Comparative Politics• Institutions
– Institutions produce a distinctive combination of sanctions and incentives that shape patterns of political influence and organization and lead political and economic actors toward some kinds of behavior and away from others
• Interests– Interests refer to the “real, material interests of the principal actors,
whether conceived as individuals or groups”
• Ideas– “Ideas-oriented approaches to political economy have real value in
that they capture dimensions of human interaction normally lost in other perspectives”
Institutions
• Formal versus Informal Institutions– The role of formal institutions in developing world may diverge
quite significantly and systematically from an Weberian ideal type (Sangmpam, 2007)
– We also know that in the developing world, informal institutions are much more important
• Collective Property Institutions versus Individualized Institutions– Community-based adaptation is seen as one appropriate response
to anticipated climate change (Ayers and Forsyth, 2009; Forsyth, 2013)
– But collective property institutions are not only type of institution with bearing on climate change adaptation and food security• Activities such as agriculture and tree-crop farming are often better governed as
individual private goods because the costs of the enforcement of property rights is low relative to the benefits of private ownership (Otsuka and Place, 2001: 18).
Interests• The relationship between groups of actors is complex, often
involving competing political factions rooted in societal interests – Political Settlements (Khan 2010)– State Power for Development (Kholi 2004)
• Climate change is but one of many factors that affect the aggregate interests of any state, societal or market actor
• The interests at play in climate change adaptation and food security are only beginning to be addressed – Government interest and ethno-regional patronage drive resource allocations
in food aid, natural disaster response and public school funding – Subnational distribution of adaptation funds in Malawi (Barrett 2014):
• Driven primarily by donor utility, district absorptive capacity, and physical vulnerability • Inversely related to socioeconomic vulnerability • Patronage is less important
• “Good Enough” Governance?– What is the likelihood of climate change leading to radical transformation of
existing power structures and material resources for climate justice.
Ideas
• Climate science has not been sufficiently effective in driving change because of the different ways that scientific ideas become politicized as well as the material interests at play in climate policy
• How do ideas interact with other factors?– “…in order for new ideas to progress they must ‘work on’ interests to realign the policy goals of collective actors, and they must ‘work through’ organizations to transform policy-making routines and state capacities” (Bradford, 1999: 18)
• Competing Ideas– Economic Ideas– Legitimacy– Moral Politics
Integrating International and Domestic Politics
• Issues of international political economy also play a role
• Relevant examples– Debate about how best to leverage the funds necessary for
international adaptation– Historical and on-going food insecurity in LDCs is arguably linked to
unequal power relations in international political economy– Current shift in the global balance of power occurring with the rise
of emerging economies, particularly China.
Example of Climate Finance Governance in East Africa
• Tanzania and Uganda– Very similar in terms of level of economic development, population
and history– Very different in terms of political economy economic ideas
• Differences in economic ideas lead to different policy outcomes– Tanzania “developmentalist”
• Tanzanian state was less inclined to engage with the CDM despite retaining the capacity to do so.
• A more donor-friendly country, Tanzania has provided more fertile terrain for RED+ and Adaptation initiatives than Uganda
– Uganda “Liberal developmentalist”• State was poised to engage with the CDM in the extension of existing state development initiatives
• But less donor interest in the promotion of REDD+ and Adaptation
Catalyzing Research on Climate Governance at the CCAFS
1) New Dimensions in Institutional Research– Community-Based Adaptation versus more Individualized Approaches– Formal versus Informal Institutions– Institutions linking SubnationNationalRegionalInternational
2) Research Beyond Institutions3) The Importance of Comparative Methods4) Addressing the Dependent Variable Problem5) “Good Enough Governance”
Conclusions
• Methods and conceptual tools of comparative politics can shine light on political and economic factors important for climate change adaptation and food security – Identifying causal factors important in different contexts– Emphasizes the need for conceptual clarity of the dependent
variable
• While institutions remain important, greater incorporation of ideas and interests to render research findings more effective
• Global political context matters and should calibrate donor expectations of when governance is good enough
Asante sana! Questions?
Mark Purdon, PhD
Department of International Development & GRILondon School of Economicsm.purdon@lse.ac.uk