Beyond carbon, more than forest? REDD plus governmentality in Indonesia

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Beyond carbon, more than forest? REDD plus governmentality in Indonesia. / McGregor, Andrew; Challies, Edward; Howson, Peter et al.
in: Environment and Planning A, Jahrgang 47, Nr. 1, 2015, S. 138-155.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

McGregor, A, Challies, E, Howson, P, Astuti, R, Dixon, R, Haalboom, B, Gavin, M, Tacconi, L & Afiff, S 2015, 'Beyond carbon, more than forest? REDD plus governmentality in Indonesia', Environment and Planning A, Jg. 47, Nr. 1, S. 138-155. https://doi.org/10.1068/a140054p

APA

McGregor, A., Challies, E., Howson, P., Astuti, R., Dixon, R., Haalboom, B., Gavin, M., Tacconi, L., & Afiff, S. (2015). Beyond carbon, more than forest? REDD plus governmentality in Indonesia. Environment and Planning A, 47(1), 138-155. https://doi.org/10.1068/a140054p

Vancouver

McGregor A, Challies E, Howson P, Astuti R, Dixon R, Haalboom B et al. Beyond carbon, more than forest? REDD plus governmentality in Indonesia. Environment and Planning A. 2015;47(1):138-155. doi: 10.1068/a140054p

Bibtex

@article{9b84f1f1e95446b99f30b0fd45d68486,
title = "Beyond carbon, more than forest? REDD plus governmentality in Indonesia",
abstract = "Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+) is an expanding global initiative oriented at slowing or reversing carbon emissions from forests in the Global South. The programme is based on the principle of payment for environmental services, where the carbon sequestration services of forests are seen to have a financial value which can be paid for through grant and market mechanisms. In this paper we explore how REDD+ is implemented, drawing upon the concept of governmentality. We focus on REDD+ practices in Indonesia, concluding with a case study focused on the Sungai Lamandau REDD+ project in Central Kalimantan. A cross-scalar approach is adopted that explores the different but overlapping strategies of actors congregating at international, national, and local scales. We detail the neoliberal strategies employed by international actors; the more disciplinary approaches evident within national planning processes; and local forms of engagement being practised by a forest community. Our findings reveal REDD+ to be comprised of a heterogeneous regime of disjointed practices that reflect the existing political ecologies and interests of differently located actors. Rather than consolidate these approaches we argue that the strength of the programme lies in its fluidity, which is creating new cross-scalar opportunities, and risks, for those pursuing forms of social and environmental justice.",
keywords = "Geography, Environmental justice, Environmentality, Forest governance, Governmentality, Indonesia, REDD+, govermentality, environmentality, REDD+, forest governance, environmental justice, Indonesia",
author = "Andrew McGregor and Edward Challies and Peter Howson and Rini Astuti and Rowan Dixon and Bethany Haalboom and Michael Gavin and Luca Tacconi and Suraya Afiff",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1068/a140054p",
language = "English",
volume = "47",
pages = "138--155",
journal = "Environment and Planning A",
issn = "0308-518X",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Inc.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Beyond carbon, more than forest? REDD plus governmentality in Indonesia

AU - McGregor, Andrew

AU - Challies, Edward

AU - Howson, Peter

AU - Astuti, Rini

AU - Dixon, Rowan

AU - Haalboom, Bethany

AU - Gavin, Michael

AU - Tacconi, Luca

AU - Afiff, Suraya

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+) is an expanding global initiative oriented at slowing or reversing carbon emissions from forests in the Global South. The programme is based on the principle of payment for environmental services, where the carbon sequestration services of forests are seen to have a financial value which can be paid for through grant and market mechanisms. In this paper we explore how REDD+ is implemented, drawing upon the concept of governmentality. We focus on REDD+ practices in Indonesia, concluding with a case study focused on the Sungai Lamandau REDD+ project in Central Kalimantan. A cross-scalar approach is adopted that explores the different but overlapping strategies of actors congregating at international, national, and local scales. We detail the neoliberal strategies employed by international actors; the more disciplinary approaches evident within national planning processes; and local forms of engagement being practised by a forest community. Our findings reveal REDD+ to be comprised of a heterogeneous regime of disjointed practices that reflect the existing political ecologies and interests of differently located actors. Rather than consolidate these approaches we argue that the strength of the programme lies in its fluidity, which is creating new cross-scalar opportunities, and risks, for those pursuing forms of social and environmental justice.

AB - Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+) is an expanding global initiative oriented at slowing or reversing carbon emissions from forests in the Global South. The programme is based on the principle of payment for environmental services, where the carbon sequestration services of forests are seen to have a financial value which can be paid for through grant and market mechanisms. In this paper we explore how REDD+ is implemented, drawing upon the concept of governmentality. We focus on REDD+ practices in Indonesia, concluding with a case study focused on the Sungai Lamandau REDD+ project in Central Kalimantan. A cross-scalar approach is adopted that explores the different but overlapping strategies of actors congregating at international, national, and local scales. We detail the neoliberal strategies employed by international actors; the more disciplinary approaches evident within national planning processes; and local forms of engagement being practised by a forest community. Our findings reveal REDD+ to be comprised of a heterogeneous regime of disjointed practices that reflect the existing political ecologies and interests of differently located actors. Rather than consolidate these approaches we argue that the strength of the programme lies in its fluidity, which is creating new cross-scalar opportunities, and risks, for those pursuing forms of social and environmental justice.

KW - Geography

KW - Environmental justice

KW - Environmentality

KW - Forest governance

KW - Governmentality

KW - Indonesia

KW - REDD+

KW - govermentality

KW - environmentality

KW - REDD+

KW - forest governance

KW - environmental justice

KW - Indonesia

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84921755964&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/72c0680a-5bb7-373e-a626-2942932c5f30/

U2 - 10.1068/a140054p

DO - 10.1068/a140054p

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:84921755964

VL - 47

SP - 138

EP - 155

JO - Environment and Planning A

JF - Environment and Planning A

SN - 0308-518X

IS - 1

ER -

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Benefits of Ecological Engineering Practices
  2. Konflikt
  3. Review: The dark side of relict species biology
  4. Transdisciplinary case studies as a means of sustainability learning
  5. Inquiry-based learning in sustainability science
  6. Die handelnde Menge
  7. Export intensity and plant characteristics
  8. My Touchstone Puzzles. W.D. Hamilton work on Social Wasps in the 1960s
  9. Correction to
  10. Touching Things
  11. Medienentwicklung und Medienpädagogik: Künstliche Intelligenz
  12. Four Charges Against the WTO
  13. Zweitalphabetisierung
  14. Art 156: Establishment of the Authority
  15. Berücksichtigung statutsfremder Sicherheits- und Verhaltensregeln
  16. Die Hamburger Verfassung im europäischen Kontext
  17. Governance und Leistung im Umbruch
  18. Das ‚hybride Subjekt’
  19. An Action Theory Approach to the Psychology of Entrepreneurial Actions and Entrepreneurial Success
  20. Hysteresis compensation in a piezo-hydraulic actuator using heuristic phase correction of periodic trajectories
  21. Digitale Kulturen
  22. Kooperatives Umweltmanagement
  23. Der Grundsatz der Subsidiarität der Verfassungsbeschwerde auf dem Prüfstand des Unionsrechts
  24. European Psychiatric Association (EPA) guidance on quality assurance in mental healthcare
  25. The Price of Democracy. How Money Shapes Politics and What to Do about It.
  26. Big Data und Musik
  27. Feedback als Merkmal adaptiver Lernunterstützung am Beispiel einer digitalen Lernplattform für das Unterrichtsfach Mathematik
  28. Produktbezogene Carbon Footprints in ERP-Systemen
  29. Assessing collaboration, knowledge exchange, and stakeholder agency in coastal governance to enhance climate resilience
  30. Harmonising biodiversity conservation and food security in southwestern Ethiopia
  31. Familie
  32. Dodge Ram, Bint Jbeil (Einträge zu ausgestellten Filmen)
  33. Weiterschreiben. Anschlüsse an Rebecca Ardners »Affirmation und Negation als Figuren der Kritik«
  34. Rezension zu Stefan Römer und Renate Wiehager (Hg.): The ups and downs of Stan Back Textem Verlang, Hamburg; A-Musik, Köln 2013