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14 - Certification as a new private global forest governance system: the regulatory potential of the Forest Stewardship Council

from PART III - The authority and effectiveness of actors and standards

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2010

Anne Peters
Affiliation:
Universität Basel, Switzerland
Lucy Koechlin
Affiliation:
Universität Basel, Switzerland
Till Förster
Affiliation:
Universität Basel, Switzerland
Gretta Fenner Zinkernagel
Affiliation:
Universität Basel, Switzerland
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Summary

The failure of intergovernmental negotiation processes on forests

As ‘global public goods’ that benefit numerous states and cannot be controlled by any one, forests present a particular challenge to national regulators. In response, governments began in the early 1980s to negotiate on forest regulation. These intergovernmental coordination efforts aimed to create binding and hierarchical measures for implementing international policies at the national level and produced forest management and protection standards. They therefore resulted in the creation of a ‘regime’, that is, ‘a set of principles, standards, rules and decision-making procedures, whether explicit or implicit, around which actors’ expectations converge in a specific area of international relations'. However, from the beginning, it was a regime weakened by fragmentation.

A fragmented international architecture

The architecture of international forest regulation is complex and segmented, due to the overlapping responsibilities for forest issues among different institutions and instruments. The forest negotiation process at the 1992 Rio Earth Summit resulted in non-binding texts, including the Forest Declaration and Chapter 11 of Agenda 21, and continues today under the auspices of the United Nations Forum on Forests (UNFF). Two other multilateral instruments are specifically devoted to forests: the International Tropical Timber Agreement (ITTA) and the FAO Committee on Forestry. Other non-specific international mechanisms incorporate provisions that are essential for forests. In particular, the Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) regards forests as carbon sinks and the prevention of deforestation as a means of combating carbon emissions.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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