ABSTRACT

This edited collection makes a highly significant critical contribution to the field of environmental politics. It argues that the international-level, institutionalist approach to global environmental politics has run its course, employed solely by powerful actors in order to orchestrate and manipulate local communities within a continuing hegemonic system.

The outstanding international line-up of contributors to this volume explore the real advances that are being made in the areas were the local and global intersect and how power fits into the equation. They explore the relationship between governance, power and knowledge, using power as the main analytical tool.

The contributors adopt a variety of approaches and perspectives – some starting from the local level and shifting upward to the global, and some using a global perspective that narrows down to the local. Some chapters explore specific case studies and others employ a more conceptual framework – but all of them bring a new dimension to the relationship between power and knowledge in environmental governance. Power here is explored in all its guises – from relational to structural power.

An important and timely exploration of a topic at the forefront of global debate, Environmental Governance is essential reading for all students of global environmental politics, international political economy and international relations.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Who knew and when did they know it?

part |67 pages

Power, knowledge and environmental governance from a conceptual perspective

part |64 pages

From the Local to the Global

chapter |19 pages

Multi-level governance and the politics of scale

The challenge of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment

chapter |19 pages

Reinventing the future

The global ecovillage movement as a holistic knowledge community

part |74 pages

From the global to the local

chapter |25 pages

Water for all!

The phenomenal rise of transnational knowledge and policy networks 1

chapter |20 pages

Global assistance for local environmental movements

Capacity-building in Bosnia-Herzegovina

chapter |11 pages

Conclusions

Environmental governance, power and knowledge in a local–global world