Getting ready for REDD+: Recognition and Donor-country Project Development Dynamics in Central Africa

REDD+ (Reducing Emissions, Deforestation and forest Degradation+) is a United Nations Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC) process through which governments reduce the impacts of climate change through forest conservation in a results-based payments scheme. Distinct from international ne...

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Main Authors: Gretchen M Walters, Melis Ece
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2017-01-01
Series:Conservation & Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2017;volume=15;issue=4;spage=451;epage=464;aulast=Walters
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spelling doaj-4898d25287d3402d9ade73cb7a5953612020-11-25T00:14:25ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsConservation & Society0972-49232017-01-0115445146410.4103/cs.cs_16_101Getting ready for REDD+: Recognition and Donor-country Project Development Dynamics in Central AfricaGretchen M WaltersMelis EceREDD+ (Reducing Emissions, Deforestation and forest Degradation+) is a United Nations Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC) process through which governments reduce the impacts of climate change through forest conservation in a results-based payments scheme. Distinct from international negotiations about the REDD+ framework under the UNFCCC, there are also REDD+ projects that help governments to set up the institutional architecture, plans and strategies to implement REDD+. These capacity-building projects, in the first phase of 'REDD+ readiness', involve negotiations among national and international actors in which recognition and authority claims are used by participants to influence project-level negotiations. This study analyses the project development negotiations in a World Bank-led REDD+ capacity building regional project, involving six Central African countries between 2008 and 2011. It explores how the project created a 'negotiation table' constituted of national and regional institutions recognised by the donors and governments, and how this political space, influenced by global, regional and national political agendas led to 'instances' of recognition and misrecognition – in which some negotiating parties' claims of representation were acknowledge and affirmed, while others' claims were not. Focusing on Cameroon and Gabon, this article analyses how negotiations shaped full participation by Cameroon and only partial engagement by Gabon.http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2017;volume=15;issue=4;spage=451;epage=464;aulast=WaltersREDD+donorsCentral Africatheory of recognitionproject dynamics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gretchen M Walters
Melis Ece
spellingShingle Gretchen M Walters
Melis Ece
Getting ready for REDD+: Recognition and Donor-country Project Development Dynamics in Central Africa
Conservation & Society
REDD+
donors
Central Africa
theory of recognition
project dynamics
author_facet Gretchen M Walters
Melis Ece
author_sort Gretchen M Walters
title Getting ready for REDD+: Recognition and Donor-country Project Development Dynamics in Central Africa
title_short Getting ready for REDD+: Recognition and Donor-country Project Development Dynamics in Central Africa
title_full Getting ready for REDD+: Recognition and Donor-country Project Development Dynamics in Central Africa
title_fullStr Getting ready for REDD+: Recognition and Donor-country Project Development Dynamics in Central Africa
title_full_unstemmed Getting ready for REDD+: Recognition and Donor-country Project Development Dynamics in Central Africa
title_sort getting ready for redd+: recognition and donor-country project development dynamics in central africa
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Conservation & Society
issn 0972-4923
publishDate 2017-01-01
description REDD+ (Reducing Emissions, Deforestation and forest Degradation+) is a United Nations Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC) process through which governments reduce the impacts of climate change through forest conservation in a results-based payments scheme. Distinct from international negotiations about the REDD+ framework under the UNFCCC, there are also REDD+ projects that help governments to set up the institutional architecture, plans and strategies to implement REDD+. These capacity-building projects, in the first phase of 'REDD+ readiness', involve negotiations among national and international actors in which recognition and authority claims are used by participants to influence project-level negotiations. This study analyses the project development negotiations in a World Bank-led REDD+ capacity building regional project, involving six Central African countries between 2008 and 2011. It explores how the project created a 'negotiation table' constituted of national and regional institutions recognised by the donors and governments, and how this political space, influenced by global, regional and national political agendas led to 'instances' of recognition and misrecognition – in which some negotiating parties' claims of representation were acknowledge and affirmed, while others' claims were not. Focusing on Cameroon and Gabon, this article analyses how negotiations shaped full participation by Cameroon and only partial engagement by Gabon.
topic REDD+
donors
Central Africa
theory of recognition
project dynamics
url http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2017;volume=15;issue=4;spage=451;epage=464;aulast=Walters
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