Elaborating global private meta-governance: An inventory in the realm of voluntary sustainability standards

•Advances the relevance to incorporate the concept of private meta-governance in our studies of global governance for sustainable development.•Discusses the opportunities of global private meta-governance in various issue fields.•Highlights private meta-governance as a solution to fragmentation prob...

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Published in:Global environmental change Vol. 27; pp. 41 - 50
Main Authors: Derkx, Boudewijn, Glasbergen, Pieter
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Amsterdam Elsevier Ltd 01-07-2014
Elsevier
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Summary:•Advances the relevance to incorporate the concept of private meta-governance in our studies of global governance for sustainable development.•Discusses the opportunities of global private meta-governance in various issue fields.•Highlights private meta-governance as a solution to fragmentation problems at the global level. Voluntary sustainability standards and certification schemes are expanding in a variety of economic sectors. The relatively uncoordinated coexistence of multiple competing schemes has created a very fragmented governance system. One way to analytically approach the search for solutions to this fragmentation is grasped with the relatively new concept of meta-governance. Meta-governance as we understand it draws attention to the management of plurality with the aim to induce more coherence in the governance of an issue area. In political science, meta-governance has mainly been attributed to governmental authorities. However, over the past decade, a number of voluntary standards setters have – with or without the support of UN agencies – started to address the need for meta-governance as well. Their efforts generally entail the coming together of a number of frontrunner schemes and the organizations backing them to jointly address the challenges their self-created regulatory systems face and produce greater coherence among their efforts. This paper studies private meta-governance attempts in the fields of fair labor (JO-IN), sustainable tourism (GSTC), and organic agriculture (ITF), as well as a meta-governance initiative that aims to improve the credibility of private standards as governance mechanisms (ISEAL Alliance). Based on document analysis and interviews we analyze how these meta-governance initiatives have given shape to their aspirations, how successful their efforts have been in effecting change, and what determining factors are. From the empirical research, we distil some more general lessons and insights about the politics and practice of private meta-governance.
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ISSN:0959-3780
1872-9495
DOI:10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2014.04.016