Abstract

Daniel Bromley argues against Oran Young’s FIT model as a basis for environmental governance, on the grounds that humans cannot manage nature and that attempts to do so are based on a scientistic, modernist conceit. At issue is the role of natural and social scientists in adjudicating questions about what we ought to do to close governance gaps and address unsustainable behaviors. If Bromley is right, then the lessons of the American pragmatist tradition recommend against attempts to “fit” social institutions to the natural world. The first objective of this paper is to argue that Bromley’s view is not in keeping with the pragmatism of C. S. Peirce and John Dewey, which actually places a high value on natural and social scientific modes of inquiry in the service of social ends. I argue that Young’s proposal is in fact a development of the pragmatist idea that social institutions must be fit in the sense of fitness, i.e., resilient and able to navigate uncertainty. Social institutions must also evolve to accommodate the emerging values of the agents who operate within them. The second objective of this paper is to examine the role of social science expertise in the design of social policies. Governance institutions typically rely on the testimony of natural scientists, at least in part, to understand the natural systems they operate within. However, natural systems are also social systems, so it seems pertinent to ask whether there is a role for social systems experts to play in helping to design environmental governance institutions. I argue that social scientists can make a unique contribution as experts on social institutions, and as such, are necessary to bring about a transformation of the unsustainable institutions that are preventing us from achieving stated sustainable development goals.

Highlights

  • In an article in Ecology and Society, Daniel Bromley (2012) argues that the proper role of science in designing environmental governance frameworks has been widely misunderstood

  • I argue that social scientists can make a unique contribution as experts on social institutions, and as such, are necessary to bring about a transformation of the unsustainable institutions that are preventing us from achieving stated sustainable development goals

  • Construed as an institution of knowledge generation, science certainly has an important role to play in institutional design, because scientists are in a position to carefully examine, test, and monitor our expectations about natural and social systems

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

In an article in Ecology and Society, Daniel Bromley (2012) argues that the proper role of science in designing environmental governance frameworks has been widely misunderstood. Scientific knowledge, according to Bromley, cannot be mobilized to ensure a fit between social institutions and natural systems, as Young’s and other similar proposals would suggest. The guiding principle of the Lu et al proposal is that policy targets, and by extension, the governance institutions that make it possible to achieve them, should be SMART, i.e., specific, measurable, attainable (and ambitious), relevant, and time-bound (ICSU and ISSC 2015:78). These are lofty goals given the complexity of social processes, their multifaceted relations to natural processes, and the morally contentious task of determining what counts as relevant SDG targets. Peirce and John Dewey, which places a high social value on scientific modes of inquiry

1University of Waterloo
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