Multilevel Governance for Forests and Climate Change: Learning from Southern Mexico
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- How do the views of different actors participating in REDD+ strategic planning at the sub-national (state) level, taking Quintana Roo as an example, align with the national policy approach to REDD+ as a broad, holistic strategy for sustainable rural development?
- (1)
- How do the current practices of horizontal and vertical coordination in MLG support procedurally legitimate REDD+ planning to operationalize the envisioned approach? What kind of opportunities and bottlenecks are there, and with what implications for the development and implementation of locally appropriate actions?
2. Case Study: Multilevel Governance for REDD+ in Quintana Roo, Mexico
2.1. Conceptual Framework
- Ownership on the basis of inclusive and representative participation. The inclusion of as many stakeholders as possible in policy formulation, though to varying degrees, is the norm in current development discourse. Parties to the UNFCCC have agreed to follow this principle in the development of REDD+ actions [22]. With increased duration and quality of participation, stakeholders develop an ownership over the negotiated rules and norms and are more likely to accept the costs of implementing them. This ownership is both emotional (attachment to the process and to other involved actors) as well as rational; i.e., there is an expectation that through participation, the actors will be able to access relevant information as well as make their own proposals and defend their own interests in the process. Often, participation is indirect through representatives and spokespersons. It is important that the representatives are considered sincere, legitimate and sufficiently mandated by their principals or constituencies so that the rules, if indeed negotiated by the representatives in participatory processes, are accepted also by the constituencies [19].
- Social learning and persuasion based on deliberation. This core facet of the theories on deliberative democracy [23,24] assumes that when participants to political processes have the chance to critically, freely and transparently argue for and against different policy proposals, they are more likely to accept the outcome of the negotiation and subsequently comply with it. The outcome is not necessarily a consensus [25], but social learning may occur as a result of being exposed to new evidence and arguments or simply recognizing that multiple points of view exist, leading the actors to redefine the situation and ultimately contributing to behavioral change [19]. However, the discursive aspects of policy processes and particularly the influence of deliberation may be undermined by entrenched power asymmetries based on differential positions of actors in the relevant formal institutional frameworks as well as resource networks [21,26,27].
2.2. Data Collection and Analysis
Organizational Type | N Nominated | n Interviewed | Level of Governance |
---|---|---|---|
Federal government | 8 | 5 (63%) | National, with branches at the state level and operations at the local level |
State government | 5 | 4 (80%) | State (Yucatán and Campeche state governments considered in Figure 1 as “regional”) |
Municipal government | 4 | 3 (75%) | Local |
National NGO | 11 | 8 (73%) | National/regional/state |
Producer organization | 8 | 4 (50%) | State/local |
Academic, research | 5 | 1 (20%) | State |
International NGO | 3 | 3 (100%) | International, with operations at national, regional, and local levels |
Intergovernmental | 2 | 1 (50%) | International |
Foreign government | 1 | 0 | International |
Total | 47 | 26 (55%/76% of the actors named in 90% of nominations made) |
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Conceptualizing REDD+: Means to an End in Holistic Rural Development
“The vision is to achieve changes and REDD+ is one opportunity to strengthen them, but it is not an end in itself.”(International NGO officer, 15 November 2013)
“You open a call, look here guys, here is the menu, you can ask for this: fried eggs, motuleños, whatever…You choose and in one month you need to present these things and in six months the money will arrive. Once the money arrives you need to show me the results. This is an easy monitoring strategy for the government, but it is not exactly what is required.”(Producer organization officer, 29 November 2013)
3.2. Procedural Legitimacy in Horizontal and Vertical Coordination for REDD+
3.2.1. Participation and Representation in the Formal Structures and Networks
“... he did not know he was there (in the CTC), but by default he was the member as the sector president. He did not know it but I explained it to him the other day when I sent the invitation. He said, something like that was mentioned before but I don’t know what I’m going to do there. And he is totally right, I mean, how is it that I’m going to a meeting I’ve never been invited to before and how is my name there?”(CTC president, 2 December 2013)
“I am already annoyed with convening meetings. I arrive there [in the meeting to discuss joint position for the CTC] and they almost do not attend, they are a few or they do not attend. I convene and I declare the meeting void. So I go with what I think I ought to say. So I am already participating as a person, although I represent six organizations. And I don’t think I am the only one that this happens to.”(Sectoral representative, 21 November 2013)
3.2.2. Information Sharing, Deliberation and Influence
“The only participatory body [in REDD+], but with limitations, is the Technical Consultative Council [CTC] which, as its name says, is consultative; that is, the decisions are made elsewhere.”(Producer organization officer, 29 November 2013)
“I would like it to be the Council [CTC], but traditionally and based on my experience, all the councils have been treated as something that you create to ensure that you are informing and listening to opinions, but as regards clear influence… Because as they (state and federal government representatives locally) say, ‘if even we cannot influence this, then (how will) you?’ That is, it all comes from Mexico City, the alignments come from Mexico City, so how to change them? For that it is difficult.”(Director of a producer organization, 5 December 2013)
“Now, the problem is, when somebody is financing you, there are also rights, and it is like… like you are afraid of contradicting the one who is paying, bringing the coffee. You feel like a traitor in a way. They are helping me and I’m telling them they are not giving me enough information.”(Director of a producer organization, 5 December 2013)
4. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
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Rantala, S.; Hajjar, R.; Skutsch, M. Multilevel Governance for Forests and Climate Change: Learning from Southern Mexico. Forests 2014, 5, 3147-3168. https://doi.org/10.3390/f5123147
Rantala S, Hajjar R, Skutsch M. Multilevel Governance for Forests and Climate Change: Learning from Southern Mexico. Forests. 2014; 5(12):3147-3168. https://doi.org/10.3390/f5123147
Chicago/Turabian StyleRantala, Salla, Reem Hajjar, and Margaret Skutsch. 2014. "Multilevel Governance for Forests and Climate Change: Learning from Southern Mexico" Forests 5, no. 12: 3147-3168. https://doi.org/10.3390/f5123147
APA StyleRantala, S., Hajjar, R., & Skutsch, M. (2014). Multilevel Governance for Forests and Climate Change: Learning from Southern Mexico. Forests, 5(12), 3147-3168. https://doi.org/10.3390/f5123147