ABSTRACT

This book discusses political controversies involved in global biodiversity policy, and the practical opportunities that are opened up in solving them through increased citizen participation and democratic deliberation. It examines the emerging practice of deliberative global governance and its political consequences.

The collection focuses on the intersection of global biodiversity policy and the promise of deliberative democracy. In doing so, it examines how new discursive logics emerge in global citizen deliberation that might destabilize the impasses encountered in biodiversity negotiations, how a "global citizens’ voice" emerges in deliberative processes despite the dominance of national institutions in the lives of those citizens, the most effective and innovative ways to amplify the results of large-scale deliberations to policy makers and broader audiences, and how future citizen deliberations can be designed to make them fair, feasible and consequential processes, in general and for biodiversity issues in particular.

This highly original contribution to the field provides theoretical discussions, empirical analyses and local experiences of biodiversity policy, making it an invaluable resource for students and scholars of environmental politics, governance and sociology, particularly those interested in deliberative democracy, citizen participation and biodiversity.

part I|40 pages

Introduction

part II|68 pages

Global biodiversity policy perspectives

part IV|41 pages

The art of amplification

part V|55 pages

Reflecting institutional design

chapter 13|20 pages

Standardizing heterogeneity

Negotiating designs for transnational citizen engagement

chapter 14|19 pages

The circulation of ideas

A discursive deliberative knowledge system for biodiversity policy

part VI|25 pages

Conclusions

chapter 15|23 pages

Global citizen deliberation

A long shot toward sustainable biodiversity policy?