The Reformed Financial Mechanism of the UNFCCC: Renegotiating the role of civil society in the governance of climate change.

To what extent have existing institutions for climate change finance succeeded in bringing the voices of poor and disadvantaged sections of civil society to the decision-making table? This paper by Anju Sharma analyses the models for civil society engagement adopted by the Global Environment Facilit...

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Main Author: Sharma, A
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: Oxford Institute for Energy Studies 2010
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author Sharma, A
author_facet Sharma, A
author_sort Sharma, A
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description To what extent have existing institutions for climate change finance succeeded in bringing the voices of poor and disadvantaged sections of civil society to the decision-making table? This paper by Anju Sharma analyses the models for civil society engagement adopted by the Global Environment Facility and the World Bank’s Climate Investment Funds. It finds that both do little more than provide an occasional venue for a poorly defined entity called ‘global civil society’ to voice concerns, where interactions are limited to one-off events rather than a continuous and integrated process of mutually beneficial engagement. The paper calls on civil society to use the strengths and legitimacy they bring to the process to renegotiate the terms of their engagement, calling particularly for a more ‘bottom-up’ process for bringing local voices to the fore; resources for sustaining and improving the quality of civil society engagement; and formalised processes of mutual accountability.
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spelling oxford-uuid:cf2c6c0d-4bb2-49bd-a81c-39a112b94f3f2022-03-27T07:40:40ZThe Reformed Financial Mechanism of the UNFCCC: Renegotiating the role of civil society in the governance of climate change.Working paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:cf2c6c0d-4bb2-49bd-a81c-39a112b94f3fEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetOxford Institute for Energy Studies2010Sharma, ATo what extent have existing institutions for climate change finance succeeded in bringing the voices of poor and disadvantaged sections of civil society to the decision-making table? This paper by Anju Sharma analyses the models for civil society engagement adopted by the Global Environment Facility and the World Bank’s Climate Investment Funds. It finds that both do little more than provide an occasional venue for a poorly defined entity called ‘global civil society’ to voice concerns, where interactions are limited to one-off events rather than a continuous and integrated process of mutually beneficial engagement. The paper calls on civil society to use the strengths and legitimacy they bring to the process to renegotiate the terms of their engagement, calling particularly for a more ‘bottom-up’ process for bringing local voices to the fore; resources for sustaining and improving the quality of civil society engagement; and formalised processes of mutual accountability.
spellingShingle Sharma, A
The Reformed Financial Mechanism of the UNFCCC: Renegotiating the role of civil society in the governance of climate change.
title The Reformed Financial Mechanism of the UNFCCC: Renegotiating the role of civil society in the governance of climate change.
title_full The Reformed Financial Mechanism of the UNFCCC: Renegotiating the role of civil society in the governance of climate change.
title_fullStr The Reformed Financial Mechanism of the UNFCCC: Renegotiating the role of civil society in the governance of climate change.
title_full_unstemmed The Reformed Financial Mechanism of the UNFCCC: Renegotiating the role of civil society in the governance of climate change.
title_short The Reformed Financial Mechanism of the UNFCCC: Renegotiating the role of civil society in the governance of climate change.
title_sort reformed financial mechanism of the unfccc renegotiating the role of civil society in the governance of climate change
work_keys_str_mv AT sharmaa thereformedfinancialmechanismoftheunfcccrenegotiatingtheroleofcivilsocietyinthegovernanceofclimatechange
AT sharmaa reformedfinancialmechanismoftheunfcccrenegotiatingtheroleofcivilsocietyinthegovernanceofclimatechange