Governance as a driver of change in the Canadian boreal zone1

Author:

Fuss Gillian E.1,Steenberg James W.N.23,Weber Marian L.4,Smith M.A. (Peggy)5,Creed Irena F.6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, University of British Columbia, 2424 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6K 1Z4, Canada.

2. School for Resource and Environmental Studies, Dalhousie University, 6100 University Avenue, Suite 5010 P.O. Box 15000, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada.

3. Nova Scotia Department of Lands and Forestry, 15 Arlington Place, Truro, NS B2N 0G9, Canada.

4. Environmental Planning and Economics, InnoTech Alberta, 250 Karl Clark Road, Edmonton, AB T6N 1E4, Canada.

5. Natural Resources Management, Lakehead University, 955 Oliver Road, Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1, Canada.

6. School of Environment and Sustainability, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5C8, Canada.

Abstract

The Canadian boreal forest is primarily public land, owned and managed by provincial governments on behalf of the public interest. Boreal forest governance consists of a complex patchwork of federal and provincial legislation, policies, tenures, and delegated authorities designed to achieve multiple (and often conflicting) social, ecological, and economic objectives. We examine the implications of boreal governance arrangements for sustainable management of ecosystem services. The paper shows how current multi-level governance arrangements that evolved from Canada’s Constitution Act are not effective at managing the cross-scale and cross-sectoral challenges of ecosystem services and have created a crisis of legitimacy for forest decisions. We show how the rise of nonstate arrangements, marketization, and decentralization are partly a response to governance gaps for ecosystem services as well as a reflection of global trends in forest governance. Past trends related to governance themes (the role and scope of government, the level of integration and coordination, Indigenous empowerment, and geopolitical influences) are used to motivate future governance scenarios.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

General Environmental Science

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