Skip to main content
SLU:s publikationsdatabas (SLUpub)

Forskningsartikel2021Vetenskapligt granskadÖppen tillgång

The politics of scale in global governance: Do more stringent international forest certification standards protect local rights in Russia?

Tysiachniouk, Maria; McDermott, Constance L.; Kulyasova, Antonina A; Teitelbaum, Sara; Elbakidze, Marine

Sammanfattning

This paper interrogates how the increasing stringency of international rules on Free Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC), as reflected in the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)’s certification standards, is shaping the rights afforded indigenous and local communities in Russia. Viewing the FSC as a ‘global governance generating network’ (GGN) that gains rule-making authority through diverse ‘forums of negotiation’ at multiple scales, we examine how international rules are negotiated and re-configured regarding 1) the ‘scope’ of requirements – who is included or excluded from FPIC and 2) ‘prescriptiveness' – the level and specificity of the rights afforded to FPIC holders.

We find that Russian stakeholders perceive the increasing prescriptiveness of FSC's global FPIC policies as disrupting their existing norms of negotiated compromise, and originating from well-defined and politically influential indigenous populations elsewhere in the world. This has spurred intense debate on the scope of who should qualify for FPIC in Russia. While FSC-Russia's Social Chamber members have used formal standard-setting processes to negotiate for the increased stringency and scope of some FPIC requirements, industry-backed forums have inserted numerous exceptions, and drawn on external expertise and legal counsel to further restrict who counts as an FPIC rights-holder. These ongoing contestations highlight the risk that prescriptive international standards protecting local rights may narrow the scope of whose rights matter in their local implementation.

Nyckelord

Forest stewardship council; FSC standard; Free prior and informed consent; Economic social and environmental chambers; Indigenous peoples rights; Boreal forest; Local community; Russia; Forest management; Public participation

Publicerad i

Forest Policy and Economics
2021, Volym: 125, artikelnummer: 102407

    Globala målen

    SDG10 Minska ojämlikheten inom och mellan länder
    SDG16 Främja fredliga och inkluderande samhällen för hållbar utveckling, tillhandahålla tillgång till rättvisa för alla samt bygga upp effektiva, och inkluderande institutioner med ansvarsutkrävande på alla nivåer

    UKÄ forskningsämne

    Juridik och samhälle

    Publikationens identifierare

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.forpol.2021.102407

    Permanent länk till denna sida (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/110880