160 likes | 286 Views
Democracy, “Good Governance” and (Sustainable) Development The Challenge of Matching Governing Form to Developmental Function William M. Lafferty Programme for Research and Documentation for a Sustainable Society (ProSus) Centre for Development and the Environment (SUM), University of Oslo
E N D
Democracy, “Good Governance” and (Sustainable) Development The Challenge of Matching Governing Form to Developmental Function William M. Lafferty Programme for Research and Documentation for a Sustainable Society (ProSus) Centre for Development and the Environment (SUM), University of Oslo and Centre for Clean Technology and Environmental Policy (CSTM) University of Twente Lecture SUM 4000, Spring 2006, 2 March 2006
Program for Research and Documentation for aSustainable Society Program for forskning og utredning for et bærekraftig samfunn One of four research programmes: Centre for Development and the Environment (SUM) University of Oslo Funded by the Research Council of Norway (RCN) Division for Strategic Priorities, Department for Environmental Issues, Energy and Sustainable Development Område for miljø og utvikling Norges forskningsråd
The ProSus mandate: • Documentation and evaluationof Norway’s follow-up of the Rio accords and the guidelines from the UN Commission on Sustainable development. Increasing emphasis on the European, Nordic and Norwegian strategies and action plans for sustainable development. • Strategic research on the barriers and potential facilitators for a more rational and effective realization of strategies and action plans for sustainable development. • Information and dissemination of the project’s evaluations and research results, and the promotion of public debate on alternative strategies, scenarios and ”normative futures”. www.sum.uio.no\prosus
What is “Sustainable Development”? The Brundtland definition – complete! “Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. It contains within it two key concepts: - the concept of ‘needs’, in particular the essential needs of the world’s poor, to which overriding priority should be given; and - the idea of limitations imposed by the state of technology and social organization on the environment’s ability to meet present and future needs.” Three crucial additional principles: - “Differentiated responsibility” – Between “developed” and “developing” member states – the issue of “over development” vs. “under development” - “Environmental policy integration” – Integrating competing economic, social, and environmental concerns - “Precautionary principle” – Protecting the sustainability of natural life-support systems in the face of uncertainty as to probable negative impacts from any given economic or social-welfare initiative
The political mandate for sustainable development: • A normative programme for change with high moral-political legitimacy (in Europe) • UN: Rio Declaration, Agenda 21, Climate Convention, Biodiversity Convention, Declaration on “Implementation of Agenda 21” from Rio +5 (New York, 1997), “Millennium Goals” from WSSD (Johannesburg, 2002), the “Global Compact”, etc, etc; • EU: Treaties of Maastricht, Amsterdam, Nice; the 5th EAP – “Towards Sustainability”; the Gothenburg “Strategy for Sustainable Development”; the “Cardiff Process”; numerous directives and lesser agreements (including several directives and action plans on “Renewable Energy Systems (RES)). • Nordic Council: Strategy for “A Sustainable Nordic Region”, with indicators and targets for SD – recently evaluated and revised • Norway: Numerous parliamentary decisions, governmental White Papers, “National Strategy for Sustainable Development” and the “National Agenda 21: Action Plan for Sustainable Development” → An integrated multi-level strategic programme for promoting SD
Democracy: “An idea in history”I. The basic elements Instruments: - Elections - Representation - Majority Rule - Minority rights - Legal enactment - Judicial Review - Referenda Core definition: (Cohen: Democracy) “A system of community government, in which the members of the community, participate, directly or indirectly, in the making of decisions which affect them all” Presuppositions: - Community - Rationality Conditions: - History - Religion / values - Technology / culture - Economy / level of need satisfaction - Education - Constitutions ("power maps") Outputs: - Decisions - Laws / regulations - Policies - Allocations
Democracy: “An idea in history”II. “Democratization” – “form follows function” Democracy for “sustainable development” History Democracy for “development” Economic democracy Industrial democracy National democracy Local democracy Scope and function
Democratization, “good governance” and development – Perspectives from Potter (Ch. 17) The “Washington consensus”: “Essentially, the view was that a combination of liberal market capitalism in an international context and liberal democracy and ‘good governance’ domestically were mutually reinforcing (a ‘virtuous cycle’) and provided core elements of a comprehensive strategy for development success equally valid for all types of society”. (p. 375) The opposing view: “... if eliminating the continuing offence of poverty and misery is the real target, then unlimited liberal democracy and unrestrained economic liberty may be the last thing the developing world needs as it whirls towards the 21st century” (Leftwich, 1993) (p. 376) The key challenge: “The contradiction is that ‘the rules and hence practices of stable democratic politics will tend to restrict policy to incremental and accommodationist (hence conservative) options’; whereas ‘developmental requirements (whether liberal or radical) will be likely to pull policy in the direction of quite sharp change affecting the economic and social structure of the society and hence important interests within it.’” (p. 377)
“Good Governance” Procedural vs substantive views • The World Bank: • “Governance”: “the means in which power is exercised in the management of a country’s economic and social resources for development” (p. 379) • “Good governance”: “synonymous with sound management in four areas”: • 1. Public sector management • 2. Accountability • 3. The legal framework for development • 4. Information and transparency • Note: • The World Bank criteria are highly procedural – no specific mention of substantive developmental goals (“free markets”, “liberalization”, etc.), nor of “competitive democracy” • Yet: • Demands for “good governance” have, in practice, almost exclusively been connected to the liberalization/de-regulation of national developing economies (“conditionality”) and competitive party politics • Hvorfor det???
A triad of models of democratic form, good governance, and developmental goals” The model of development: Guiding principles, programmes, policy instruments The model of democratic decision-making: To determine and legitimate the goals The model of good governance (public management): To effectively realize the goals
The model for democratic decision-makingcan be in conflict with The model for development • Values and principles of liberal-pluralist democracy (“polyarchy”) : • Goals and principles of sustainable development: • Community within historical-geographical domains • Community within ecological domains • Individual citizenship and direct representation of interests • “Categorical citizenship” and “proxy representation” of the interests of future generations and (for some) other species • Core values of “personal preference” and “common sense” • A strong need for science and expertise • Pluralistic representation, partisan competition and majority governance • A need for holistic, integrated decisions • Debate, dialogue, compromise, reflection and learning • Prompt, decisive and effective action
Conclusions for further discussion: • The notion of “democratization” must be relativized according to the function/purpose of the activity that is to be democratized • The Western model of “liberal pluralism” (“competitive democracy”, “polyarchy”) is strongly conditioned by the emergence and consolidation of free-market capitalism • There are good reasons to separate the decision-making and management functions of governing • Standards of “good governance” are essentially formulated as standards of good – i.e. “effective” – public management. • Some aspects of “development” are more democratically sanctioned (globally) than others: human, civil and social rights – environmental sustainability • Northern states have a clearly moral “differentiated” responsibility to do more to reduce burdens on life-support systems and natural resources than do Southern states • Southern states must nonetheless also be held responsible for “good governance for sustainable development”
For greater detail on the approach: Edward Elgar 2004: www.e-elgar.co.uk Paperback edition from April 2006 Can be downloaded at the ProSus website
Model for “good public management” for SD: Vertical and Horizontal Environmental Policy Integration (EPI)
Model for “good public management” for SD: Vertical and Horizontal Environmental Policy Integration (EPI)