Conservation Policy Making in Nepal: Problematising the Politics of Civic Resistance

Protected area governance has witnessed a shift from a strict-nature conservation model towards a seemingly more participatory approach in Nepal. Despite some progress, top-down and non-deliberative processes characterise policy making in protected area. However, many civil society actors have incre...

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Main Authors: Ramesh Kumar Sunam, Dipak Bishwokarma, Kumar Bahadur Darjee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2015-01-01
Series:Conservation & Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2015;volume=13;issue=2;spage=179;epage=188;aulast=Sunam
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spelling doaj-f0958e706bf641ffab87cd9e92d7d5e82020-11-25T00:33:35ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsConservation & Society0972-49232015-01-0113217918810.4103/0972-4923.164201Conservation Policy Making in Nepal: Problematising the Politics of Civic ResistanceRamesh Kumar SunamDipak BishwokarmaKumar Bahadur DarjeeProtected area governance has witnessed a shift from a strict-nature conservation model towards a seemingly more participatory approach in Nepal. Despite some progress, top-down and non-deliberative processes characterise policy making in protected area. However, many civil society actors have increasingly challenged the government to provide space for local people in decision making so that their rights to natural resources are considered. This article examines two key aspects of the politics of policy process: why conservation policy making is often less deliberative than it could be and why civil actors pick up some policy decisions (not others) for contestation. In doing so, we analyse a recent policy decision of the Nepal government on the protected area which encountered civic contestation. Drawing on the review of policy decisions and interviews with government authorities, civic leaders and protected area experts, this paper shows that the government and large conservation organisations continue to shape the policy process while undermining the legitimate voices of local and non-state actors in the conservation policy landscape. Civic resistance as a means of democratising policy processes looks promising, challenging unquestioned authorities of the government and conservation organisations. Nevertheless, the politics of resistance has enjoyed limited success due to the political interests of civic institutions and their leaders, at times overshadowing critical policy agenda such as the severity of rights constrained and issues of poverty and marginalisation. This article suggests that civic actors need to rethink over their politics of resistance in terms of pursuing agenda and strategies to ramp up policy deliberation.http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2015;volume=13;issue=2;spage=179;epage=188;aulast=Sunamcivic actorconservationinstitutionspolicy decisionspolicy processprotected arearesistanceNepal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ramesh Kumar Sunam
Dipak Bishwokarma
Kumar Bahadur Darjee
spellingShingle Ramesh Kumar Sunam
Dipak Bishwokarma
Kumar Bahadur Darjee
Conservation Policy Making in Nepal: Problematising the Politics of Civic Resistance
Conservation & Society
civic actor
conservation
institutions
policy decisions
policy process
protected area
resistance
Nepal
author_facet Ramesh Kumar Sunam
Dipak Bishwokarma
Kumar Bahadur Darjee
author_sort Ramesh Kumar Sunam
title Conservation Policy Making in Nepal: Problematising the Politics of Civic Resistance
title_short Conservation Policy Making in Nepal: Problematising the Politics of Civic Resistance
title_full Conservation Policy Making in Nepal: Problematising the Politics of Civic Resistance
title_fullStr Conservation Policy Making in Nepal: Problematising the Politics of Civic Resistance
title_full_unstemmed Conservation Policy Making in Nepal: Problematising the Politics of Civic Resistance
title_sort conservation policy making in nepal: problematising the politics of civic resistance
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Conservation & Society
issn 0972-4923
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Protected area governance has witnessed a shift from a strict-nature conservation model towards a seemingly more participatory approach in Nepal. Despite some progress, top-down and non-deliberative processes characterise policy making in protected area. However, many civil society actors have increasingly challenged the government to provide space for local people in decision making so that their rights to natural resources are considered. This article examines two key aspects of the politics of policy process: why conservation policy making is often less deliberative than it could be and why civil actors pick up some policy decisions (not others) for contestation. In doing so, we analyse a recent policy decision of the Nepal government on the protected area which encountered civic contestation. Drawing on the review of policy decisions and interviews with government authorities, civic leaders and protected area experts, this paper shows that the government and large conservation organisations continue to shape the policy process while undermining the legitimate voices of local and non-state actors in the conservation policy landscape. Civic resistance as a means of democratising policy processes looks promising, challenging unquestioned authorities of the government and conservation organisations. Nevertheless, the politics of resistance has enjoyed limited success due to the political interests of civic institutions and their leaders, at times overshadowing critical policy agenda such as the severity of rights constrained and issues of poverty and marginalisation. This article suggests that civic actors need to rethink over their politics of resistance in terms of pursuing agenda and strategies to ramp up policy deliberation.
topic civic actor
conservation
institutions
policy decisions
policy process
protected area
resistance
Nepal
url http://www.conservationandsociety.org/article.asp?issn=0972-4923;year=2015;volume=13;issue=2;spage=179;epage=188;aulast=Sunam
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