Quo vadis global forest governance? A transdisciplinary delphi study

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • A. Begemann - , European Forest Institute (Author)
  • L. Giessen - , Chair of Tropical and International Forestry, Institut Pertanian Bogor (Author)
  • D. Roitsch - , European Forest Institute (Author)
  • J. L. Roux - , European Forest Institute (Author)
  • M. Lovrić - , European Forest Institute (Author)
  • C. Azevedo-Ramos - , Universidade Federal do Pará (Author)
  • J. Boerner - , University of Bonn (Author)
  • C. Beeko - , Forestry Commission of Ghana (Author)
  • B. Cashore - , National University of Singapore (Author)
  • P. O. Cerutti - , World Agroforestry Centre (Author)
  • W. de Jong - , Kyoto University (Author)
  • L. J. Fosse - , Norwegian International Climate and Forest Initiative (Author)
  • A. Hinrichs - , European Forest Institute (Author)
  • D. Humphreys - , Open University Milton Keynes (Author)
  • H. Pülzl - , University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna (Author)
  • C. Santamaria - , Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (Author)
  • M. Sotirov - , University of Freiburg (Author)
  • S. Wunder - , Sant Leopold Pavilion, Center for International Forestry Research (Author)
  • G. Winkel - , European Forest Institute (Author)

Abstract

Deforestation and forest degradation remain huge global environmental challenges. Over the last decades, various forest governance initiatives and institutions have evolved in global response to interlinked topics such as climate change mitigation, biodiversity conservation, indigenous rights, and trade impacts – accompanied by various levels of academic attention. Using a Delphi methodology that draws on both policy and academic insights, we assess the currently perceived state of play in global forest governance and identify possible future directions. Results indicate that state actors are seen to be key in providing supportive regulatory frameworks, yet interviewees do not believe these will be established at the global scale. Rather, respondents point to issue-specific, regional and inter-regional coalitions of the willing, involving the private sector, to innovate global forest governance. Linking forest issues with high politics may hold promise, as demonstrated by initiatives regarding illegal logging and timber trade. Confident rule-setting in support of the public good as well as responsible investments are seen as further avenues. New forest governance “hypes”, if used strategically, can provide leverage points and resources to ensure sustainability effects on the ground. At the same time, informal markets are often crucial for governance outcomes and need consideration. As such, clarifying tenure in sovereignty-sensitive ways is important, as are innovative ways for inclusive “glocal” decision-making. Lastly, new technologies, big data and citizens’ capacities are identified as potent innovation opportunities, for making global dependencies between consumption, production and deforestation visible and holding players accountable across the value chains.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)131-141
Number of pages11
JournalEnvironmental Science and Policy
Volume123
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2021
Peer-reviewedYes

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Deforestation, Delphi assessment, Foresight, Forest degradation, Future, Global forest policy, High-level expert panel, International forest regime