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Mitigation and adaptation in polycentric systems: sources of power in the pursuit of collective goals

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TLDR
In this article, a typology of design, pragmatic, and framing power that focuses on how and in whose interests power is mobilized to achieve outcomes is developed, and the conceptual model helps to explain power dynamics across different sectors and across both climate change mitigation and adaptation.
Abstract
Polycentric governance involves multiple actors at multiple scales beyond the state. The potential of polycentric governance for promoting both climate mitigation and adaptation is well established. Yet, dominant conceptualizations of polycentric governance pay scant attention to how power dynamics affect the structure and the outcomes of climate action. We review emerging evidence on power within polycentric and distributed governance across the climate, forestry, marine, coastal, urban, and water sectors, and relate them to established positions on power within research on federalism, decentralization, international relations, and networked governance. We develop a typology of design, pragmatic, and framing power that focuses on how and in whose interests power is mobilized to achieve outcomes. We propose that the conceptual model helps to explain power dynamics across different sectors and across both climate change mitigation and adaptation. Significant research challenges arising from the analysis include the measurement and monitoring of the outcomes of power asymmetries over time.

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The Dark Side of Transformation: Latent Risks in Contemporary Sustainability Discourse

TL;DR: The authors identify five latent risks associated with discourse that frames transformation as apolitical and/or inevitable and refer to these risks as the dark side of transformation, and suggest that scientists, policymakers, and practitioners need to consider such change in more inherently plural and political ways.
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The black box of power in polycentric environmental governance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors draw together diverse social science perspectives and research into a variety of cases to show how different types of power shape rule setting, issue construction, and policy implementation in polycentric governance.
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The social structural foundations of adaptation and transformation in social-ecological systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors adopt a network perspective to theorize a continuum of structural capacities in social-ecological systems that set the stage for effective adaptation and transformation, and present a framework that hypothesizes seven specific socialecological network configurations.
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Pioneers, leaders and followers in multilevel and polycentric climate governance

TL;DR: The environmental governance literature has seen a proliferation of analytical terms to describe actors who try to engender change for the improvement of the environment/climate, such as entreprene... as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Top-Down and Bottom-Up Approaches to Implementation Research: a Critical Analysis and Suggested Synthesis

TL;DR: A conceptual framework for examining policy change over a 10-year period is outlined which combines the best features of the top-down and bottom-up approaches with insights from other literatures.
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The joint‐decision trap: lessons from german federalism and european integration

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Governance and the Capacity to Manage Resilience in Regional Social-Ecological Systems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors draw on the insights from a diverse set of case studies from around the world in which members of the Resilience Alliance have observed or engaged with sustainability problems at regional scales.
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Legitimacy and the Privatization of Environmental Governance: How Non-State Market-Driven (NSMD) Governance Systems Gain Rule-Making Authority

TL;DR: The authors developed an analytical framework designed to understand better the emergence of non-state market-driven (NSMD) governance systems and the conditions under which they may gain authority to create policy, and argued that such a framework is needed to assess whether these new private governance systems might ultimately challenge existing state-centered authority and public policy-making processes.
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Recentralizing while decentralizing: How national governments reappropriate forest resources

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use a comparative empirical approach to show how central governments in six countries (Senegal, Uganda, Nepal, Indonesia, Bolivia, and Nicaragua) use a variety of strategies to obstruct the democratic decentralization of resource management and, hence, retain central control.
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