The Role of Translation in Transnational Governance

One of the greatest challenges facing environmental governance is the interaction between science and governance. Translation is proposed as a means to analyze these interactions. To achieve some consensus on the quality of translations, norms and criteria must be developed in order to guide transla...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inTilburg Law Review Vol. 22; no. 1-2; pp. 165 - 184
Main Author Ellis, Jaye
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Leiden Brill | Nijhoff 01.10.2017
Ubiquity Press
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN2211-0046
2211-2596
2211-2545
DOI10.1163/22112596-02201008

Cover

More Information
Summary:One of the greatest challenges facing environmental governance is the interaction between science and governance. Translation is proposed as a means to analyze these interactions. To achieve some consensus on the quality of translations, norms and criteria must be developed in order to guide translation, namely through linkage institutions that promote productive misreadings of scientific information by governance authorities and permit judgments regarding the quality and utility of these misreadings. Given the multiplicity of sites - state and non-state - that have access to scientific and other environmentally relevant information, the structures and processes through which translation of scientific knowledge takes place will be subject to ongoing contestation. Nevertheless, the acknowledgment that scientific knowledge must be interpreted and its meaning reconstituted within governance systems may foster a healthier division of labor between science and governance, one in which political and legal authorities assume their responsibility to make judgments and decisions.
ISSN:2211-0046
2211-2596
2211-2545
DOI:10.1163/22112596-02201008