The resource property question in climate stewardship and sustainability transitions
Natural resources are increasingly lauded as antidotes to the current social and ecological crises. In this context, a global land and natural resource rush for business, development and climate and environmental stewardship purposes has been at work since the mid-2000s. This paper discusses whether...
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Published in | Land use policy Vol. 108; p. 105529 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Kidlington
Elsevier Ltd
01.09.2021
Elsevier Science Ltd |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0264-8377 1873-5754 |
DOI | 10.1016/j.landusepol.2021.105529 |
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Summary: | Natural resources are increasingly lauded as antidotes to the current social and ecological crises. In this context, a global land and natural resource rush for business, development and climate and environmental stewardship purposes has been at work since the mid-2000s. This paper discusses whether, how, and the extent to which the resource rush behind mainstream climate stewardship and sustainability transitions shapes the contemporary resource property question regarding who has the ability and power to harness what natural resources where, how, and for what purpose(s). It explores the drivers, protagonists and implications for research and political advocacy of critical shifts in the object, subject, form, enforcing authority, policy structure, and justification of resource property during neoliberal globalization since the 1970s. An alliance of trailblazing resource rush supporters and accommodators is behind these changes which, when taken altogether, hint at a broader restructuring trend of the resource property question in climate stewardship and sustainability transitions today. Despite its potential to democratize resource access, control and ownership, the restructuring trend so far primarily serves the purposes of big business and conservation non-profits to enhance their social license to operate by means of reducing local resource tenure risks at the grassroots level and reputational risks more generally. While there is a need for further research, the examined changes seem to be transforming the playing field of political advocacy around resource governance in climate stewardship and transitions to sustainability. But the examined restructuring trend is highly contested and contingent on an unstable middle-ground sort of political compromise, the future trajectory of which remains to be seen.
•The global resource rush behind climate stewardship and sustainability transitions is restructuring the contemporary resource property question regarding who has the ability and power to harness what natural resources where, how, and for what purpose.•An alliance of trailblazing resource rush supporters and accommodators is behind this restructuring trend, which ultimately serves the purposes of big business and conservation non-profits to enhance their social license to operate.•The restructuring trend seems to be fundamentally transforming the playing field of political advocacy around resource governance in climate stewardship and transitions to sustainability.•But along its current path, the resource property question in mainstream climate stewardship and sustainability transitions is highly contested and contingent on an unstable middle-ground sort of political compromise, the future trajectory of which remains to be seen. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0264-8377 1873-5754 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.landusepol.2021.105529 |