Article (Scientific journals)
Environmental bargaining and boundary organizations: Remapping British Columbia’s ‘Great Bear’ rainforest
Affolderbach, Julia; Clapp, Roger; Hayter, Roger
2012In Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 102 (6), p. 1391-1408
Peer reviewed
 

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Keywords :
remapping; environmental bargaining; boundary organizations; environmental governance; ENGOs
Abstract :
[en] In recent decades, the creation of conservation areas has been a significant and contested trend in resource peripheries around the globe, embracing the “remapping” of resource extents, tenures, and values and thereby land use patterns and regional development trajectories. Environmental nongovernmental organizations (ENGOs) have emerged as key actors in the conflicts underlying this remapping, as advocates of environmental values and opponents of vested economic and political interests engaged in large-scale resource commodification. Remapping is contentious because it is inescapably normative, rendering moral judgments and alterations of property rights and the meaning of sustainable development. The outcomes of remapping are highly contingent, driven by environmental bargaining processes that describe the formal and informal interactions among ENGOs, industrial interests, different levels of government, and other actors with conflicting interests, strategies, and alliances. This article explores how conflicts were resolved in the creation of the Great Bear Rainforest on British Columbia’s central coast. Conceptually, the stakeholder model approach to resource conflict is elaborated by emphasizing the roles of ENGOs as advocates and representatives of environmental values within scientific boundary organizations created specifically to be key facilitators in the bargaining process. The study draws on forest policy documents, records of negotiation, surveys of the region’s ecological and socioeconomic structures, and field visits. The analysis reveals the Coast Information Team as the multirepresentative scientific boundary organization that developed a shared, accepted multilayered geographic information system of the region. This map provided a “shared currency” and the basis for agreement regarding (1) land use zoning at multiple scales, (2) ecosystem-based management, and (3) conservation mapping.
Disciplines :
Social & behavioral sciences, psychology: Multidisciplinary, general & others
Regional & inter-regional studies
Human geography & demography
Identifiers :
UNILU:UL-ARTICLE-2011-535
Author, co-author :
Affolderbach, Julia ;  University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Language and Literature, Humanities, Arts and Education (FLSHASE) > Identités, Politiques, Sociétés, Espaces (IPSE)
Clapp, Roger;  Simon Fraser University - SFU > Department of Geography
Hayter, Roger;  Simon Fraser University - SFU > Department of Geography
Language :
English
Title :
Environmental bargaining and boundary organizations: Remapping British Columbia’s ‘Great Bear’ rainforest
Publication date :
2012
Journal title :
Annals of the Association of American Geographers
ISSN :
0004-5608
Publisher :
Blackwell Publishing
Volume :
102
Issue :
6
Pages :
1391-1408
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Funders :
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Canada (Grant 410-2003-1377)
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since 24 July 2013

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