Abstract

Sustainability transitions are of an inherently political nature. In particular, discussions on climate policy are dominated by national and international politics. Furthermore, sustainability transitions involve network governance in which both private, public, and societal actors are involved. These governance processes call for closely scrutinizing their performance in terms of democratic legitimacy. To study and assess the democratic quality of governance processes regarding climate policy, this article focuses on the role of political leadership, conceptualized as political meta-governance, in enhancing the democratic legitimacy in the field of sustainability transitions. In doing so, it examines the case of the Dutch National Agreement on Climate (“Nationaal Klimaatakkoord”). The findings of this study underline the theoretical assumption that governments seek to use network governance to address climate change and develop policies. Seeking to address the application of political meta-governance, this study finds that political leaders struggle to bring about a fully-fledged, deliberative, and integrative meta-governance approach. However, disparate meta-governance strategies are reported. Although democratic legitimacy concerning the Dutch Agreement on Climate in terms of accountability can be regarded as high, values concerning voice (inclusiveness) and due deliberation (transparency) score comparatively low. As such, this study further justifies the close attention governance scholars and practitioners pay to the democratic values at stake when governing through governance networks.

Highlights

  • As has been heralded with several national and international agreements concerning climate change, a global momentum appears to have come about to further accelerate the transition towards more sustainable societies

  • We set out to measure the democratic legitimacy of the governance network concerned with the Agreement on Climate

  • Since political meta-governance as defined in this study explicitly addresses the role of Members of Parliament, we will turn towards the role of MP’s meta-governing the interactive climate-governance process concerning the Dutch Agreement on Climate

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Summary

Introduction

As has been heralded with several national and international agreements concerning climate change, a global momentum appears to have come about to further accelerate the transition towards more sustainable societies. Exact definitions may differ among scholars [8], related modes of governance assume the emergence of networks or arrangements of interdependent societal, private and/or public entities that operate autonomously, surround a policy problem or (public) service, and interact in order to exchange resources and make decisions together [9,10,11,12,13] These patterns of interaction give rise to an arrangement of actors concerned with a particular problem or service, which engages in a governance process based on interaction [12,14,15]. This constellation of operational autonomous, but interdependent actors is often referred to as a “governance network” [10]

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