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Abstract

Engaging with knowledges outside of western science and questions of power is increasingly being acknowledged as an imperative for helping solve intractable environmental problems. What is unacknowledged is the difference in how this is reasoning is applied in relation to policy-making in the global North and South. While questions of power such as gender and people’s participation are integral to international policy-making in the Northern development policies for the South, there is often little on these perspectives in domestic environmental policy-making. Underlying this paradox are assumptions about science and development in policy-making that preclude a discussion of environmental alternatives. These assumptions generate blind spots in environmental policy-making that need to be addressed so that environmental policy in the global North too is able to respond to environmental problems on the basis of evidence and rather than assumptions about science and about the rest of the world.

Published in

World Development Perspectives
2017, volume: 5, pages: 27-29

SLU Authors

Global goals (SDG)

SDG5 Gender equality

UKÄ Subject classification

Other Geographic Studies
Social Anthropology
Human Geography

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wdp.2017.02.004

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/90865