Abstract

This article examines the (re)production of discourses and storylines in the process of policy translation of Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) in Laos. Applying the concepts of policy discourses and policy translation, we first identify the prominent storylines at the various governance levels in Laos. Second, we compare and contrast these storylines with the global REDD+ discourses. Further, we discuss how different actors' capacities and political agendas shape REDD+ storylines at different levels of governance. We find that national and sub-national storylines portray REDD+ mainly as a tool for supporting Laos' forestry strategy and sustainable forest management; for capacity-building and donor funding; and for village forest management and education of villagers. At the village level, many see REDD+ as a project for various political elites and external actors to control forests and cheat villagers. We conclude that, while globally there is increasing attention to civic-environmentalism in REDD+, neoliberalist and techno-managerial discourses still dominate. At the village level, however, civic-environmentalist ideas, such as social safeguards, benefit sharing, and equity largely disappear and two opposing discourses emerge representing anti-civic ideas and REDD+ resentment. Furthermore, while techno-managerial ideas permeate all levels in Laos, neoliberalist ideas in terms of carbon trading are almost absent. During policy translation, REDD+ thus transforms into "just another" top-down development project. This serves the interest of Laos's techno-managerial elite well, but has little positive prospect for local people and forests. In this perspective, the lack of alternative discourse-coalitions promoting non-carbon benefits, social safeguards, and equity is striking.Key Words: REDD+, Laos, policy translation, environmental discourses, neoliberalism, civic environmentalism

Highlights

  • REDD+ academic debates and environmental policy discoursesREDD+ is a mechanism aiming at mitigating climate change by creating financial value for carbon stored in forests having evolved within the United Nation's Framework Convention for Climate Change, UNFCCC (UNREDD 2017)

  • By REDD+ implementation in Laos we refer to two major activities: the REDD+ policy process, including policy and institutional reforms, which currently mainly happens at the national level, and REDD+ pilot project implementation in the study areas

  • We present the empirical context of REDD+ implementation in Laos

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Summary

Introduction

REDD+ is a mechanism aiming at mitigating climate change by creating financial value for carbon stored in forests having evolved within the United Nation's Framework Convention for Climate Change, UNFCCC (UNREDD 2017). The key argument is that neoliberalism and techno-managerial approaches cannot solve the global environmental problems we face today because these very logics caused the problems in the first place (Dressler et al 2015; Fletcher et al 2016; Hajer 1995) This literature points to trade-offs instead of synergies between economic growth, sustainable forest management, and equity in REDD+ (Dawson et al 2018; Fox et al 2011; Milne et al 2019; Nathan and Pasgaard 2017; Ramcilovic-Suominen 2019). Our study aims at documenting the storylines emerging at the REDD+ implementation piloting sites at the national, subnational (provincial and district), and local (village) levels, to understand how they emerge and what are their implications to REDD+ implementation. We explain the theoretical framework that has guided our study

Theoretical framework
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Research methods
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