Affiliation:
1. Department of Sociology and Work Science University of Gothenburg Box 720, 40530 Göteborg, Sweden
Abstract
Public or stakeholder participation in environmental governance has been strongly advocated within the United Nations (UN) since the early 1990s. A relatively new mechanism for global climate finance that emphasises stakeholder engagement is the Green Climate Fund (GCF), a UN strategy for channelling funds from the Global North to the Global South. Drawing on previous critical approaches to multi-stakeholder involvement in global governance, this article explores stakeholder involvement within the GCF. The study combines ideas from institutional logics and resource dependency to provide a better understanding of how stakeholder arrangements are shaped in climate organisations. Results show that the GCF stakeholder arrangement favours private sector stakeholders – stakeholders that take a technical and apolitical approach to climate finance – and disfavours smaller, less resourceful stakeholders as well as those who perform a politicised watchdog function.
Subject
Philosophy,General Environmental Science
Reference59 articles.
1. ActionAid . 2016. Joint CSO Submission on Issues to be Addressed and Improved in a Comprehensive Review of the Participation of Observers in the Activities of the GCF Board. https://us.boell.org/sites/default/files/uploads/2012/10/cso_jointsub-mission_gcf_observerparticipationreview_final_submitted.pdf.
2. Civil Society in Global Environmental Governance
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