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Ben Cashore

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Title: Ben Cashore


1
The Emergence of Forest Certification in the
European and North American Forest Sectors
  • Ben Cashore
  • Associate Professor,
  • Director, Program on Forest Policy and Governance
  • Project on Forest Certification
  • School of Forestry and Environmental Studies
  • Yale University
  • Presentation to the International workshop  What
    makes them work? Theoretical and empirical
    advances on implementation of ecocertification
    schemes  INRA-ENGREF - Laboratory of Forest
    Economics Nancy, France, 29 June 2006

2
Overview
  • My discipline
  • Political scientist
  • Approach of paper
  • Comparative case study historical
    institutionalist
  • Why did forest certification emerge?
  • Identify certification as non-state market
    driven governance
  • Review legitimacy framework
  • Review its application to European and North
    American forest sectors
  • If time present latest conceptual effort with
    Bernstein on the emergence and institutionalizatio
    n of NSMD generally

3
No time to review everything!
  • Benjamin Cashore, Graeme Auld Auld, Beth Egan and
    Deanna Newsom
  • The Emergence of Forest Certification in the
    European and North American Forest Sectors paper
    for this workshop
  • Graeme Auld and Deanna Newsom
  • Governing through Markets Forest Certification
    and the Emergence of Non-state Authority
  • www.governingthroughmarkets.com
  • Fred Gale, Errol Meidinger, Deanna Newsom
  • Confronting Sustainability Forest Certification
    in Developing and Transitioning Societies
  • www.yale.edu/forestcertification
  • Graeme Auld, Aseem Prakash, Erika Sasser
  • Book on 16 US forest companies choices over
    forest certification
  • Bernstein and Cashore
  • . 2006. Can Non-State Global Governance be
    Legitimate? A Theoretical Framework.
  • Paper read at Joint IDDRI, CIRAD and Sciences-Po
    research unit conference, in conjunction with
    the Association Française de Sociologie on the
    role of norms (standards) in the governance of
    economic activities ("Dispositif de normalisation
    comme technologie de gouvernement économique"),
    June 7-9th, at Montpellier

4
Why Did Forest Certification Emerge?
  • Origins in tropical forest destruction in 1980s
  • Boycotts failed
  • Encouraged conversion of forests to other uses
  • Didnt distinguish responsible from irresponsible
    forestry
  • International Tropical Timber Agreement viewed as
    weak
  • Longstanding Efforts to Develop Global Forest
    Convention failed
  • Canada was a strong supporter
  • Sovereignty key issue
  • Left with Non-Binding Authoritative Statement of
    Forest Principles

5
Why Did Forest Certification Emerge?
  • In 1992 dissatisfied international environmental
    groups and their allies decided to reject
    governmental processes
  • Bypassed governments by creating a system to
    recognize forest firms and owners for practicing
    responsible forestry
  • Attempts to reverse downward effects of economic
    globalization trading up (Vogel)
  • Use of eco-labels and market benefits

6
Argument Paradigm Shift in Rule Making
  • Forest certification could result in the most
    significant change in forest management since
    Gifford Pinchot brought the profession of
    forestry to North America

7
Forest certification as NSMD Governance
8
NSMD Certification Now Proliferating
  • Fisheries
  • Coffee production
  • Food production
  • Mining
  • Sustainable Tourism
  • Sweatshops
  • Note NSMD certification different from global
    value chain

9
Forest Certification Starting Points
  • Competition between programs
  • Two different conceptions

10
The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)
  • Environmental group initiated
  • Prescriptive, detailed rules
  • Wide in scope
  • Institutions exclude business from dominating
  • Detailed standards created by national or
    regional working groups

11
The Emergence of FSC alternatives
  • Initiated by Forest industry and/or forest
    landowners
  • Often in cooperation with government forestry and
    trade agencies
  • Frustration with FSC governance and policy
    choices
  • Emphasized national sovereignty
  • Saw certification as communications devise
  • Business creates rules
  • Goal oriented, flexible
  • Continual improvement

12
Examples of FSC alternatives
  • Canadian Standards Association (CSA) Sustainable
    Forestry Standards
  • US Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI)
  • Brazils CERFLOR
  • Australian forestry standard
  • Program for the Endorsement of Forest
    Certification (PEFC)
  • Now houses in one umbrella most of FSC
    competitors

13
Outcome of this competition important
  • Will affect how certification as a market
    instrument treats the use of
  • Exotic species
  • Set asides
  • Chemical use
  • GMOs
  • Plantations
  • Riparian streamside management
  • Natural forest regeneration
  • Governance

14
How important is this competition?
15
To understand this competition what did we do?
  • Theoretical framework that began with idea of
    legitimacy

16
Legitimacy Framework Clarifies What is going on
Certification Program (Governance System)
Profit maximizing behavior Short term material
self interest Often result of boycott campaigns
Durability dependent on market access, and
economic incentives
Types of Legitimacy
Pragmatic
Least Durable? Prerequiste?
Environmental Groups
Forest companies
Private Forest Land owners
Lumber Dealers/ Retailers
Consumers
17
Principled beliefs Right thing to do More
engrained than pragmatic Values dont change
swiftly
18
to do otherwise is unthinkable understandable
-most durable
Most Durable
19
Legitimacy Achievement Strategies
Convert
Change external audience support e.g. create
buyers groups, boycotts, advertising
20
Conform
Adapt to external pressures i.e. Change
certification rules and procedures to adapt to
concerns of external audiences
21
Inform
When like minded audiences are told that the
program exists
22
(No Transcript)
23
Legitimacy Achievement Key
  • Converting strategies
  • do not change original conception or approach to
    forest management
  • Conforming strategies
  • force programs to change from original conception
  • Can lead to relax requirements for biodiversity
    conservation
  • Means analysis must understand factors that lead
    to converting versus conforming
  • Book explores this competition in five cases
  • British Columbia, Canada
  • United States
  • United Kingdom
  • Germany
  • Sweden
  • Explores how some cases encouraged converting
    while others required conforming

24
Differences within North America and Europe
  • What is book explaining?
  • Support given by forest companies and
    non-industrial landowners to competing
    certification programs
  • Explain changes in FSC support
  • Empirical puzzle not normative stance
  • Forest sectors in five regions
  • British Columbia, Canada
  • United States
  • United Kingdom
  • Germany
  • Sweden

25
Empirical puzzle
  • Snapshot of Support for the FSC (Early 1990s vs.
    2002)
  • Note support continues to change as process
    evolves

26
Explanation
  • Hypothesized factors that facilitate support for
    FSC

27
Summary
  • Factors facilitating FSC strategic efforts
  • Not deterministic timing and sequencing of
    strategies still matters

28
Overall conclusions
  • Turns out
  • that a prerequisite for forest certification to
    work as a NSMD governance system is that firms
    along the supply chain must grant pragmatic
    legitimacy.
  • Each certification program has a core audience
    of support that strategists must maintain.
  • FSC must maintain enough support from
    environmental groups, who tend to grant moral
    legitimacy
  • FSC alternatives must maintain support from its
    forest owner members.
  • This limits conforming strategies

29
Overall conclusions
  • BUT Competition among programs has led to
  • FSC conforming to become more palatable to
    business issues
  • FSC alternatives conforming to address supply
    chain and environmental group issues
  • Non-industrial forest owners more strongly
    opposed to FSC than industrial interests
  • Transaction costs
  • Beliefs about outside control

30
Questions raised by GTM study?
  • 1) What is happening in the rest of the world?
  • Led to edited book Cashore, Gale, Meidinger,
    Newsom
  • 16 countries developing and Eastern European
    Emerging

31
Area certified by Country Certification system
Source Ewald Rameststeiner
32
Area Certified by Region and Certification system
33
Questions raised by GTM study?
  • 2) Why do firms within countries make different
    choices
  • Comparison study of 16 US forest firms with Auld,
    Prakash, and Sasser
  • Data collected, writing up results

34
Questions raised by GTM study?
  • 3) How do we think broadly about NSMD in general
  • Dynamic
  • Conundrum
  • Profit maximizing firms must evaluate as being in
    their economic advantage
  • Environmental and social actors must see NSMD
    systems as ameliorating the problem for which
    they were created
  • Leads to paper I wrote for Bernstein on the three
    stages of NSMD governace
  • If time!

35
Bernstein Cashore paper
  • Returned to legitimacy as dependent variable
  • Idea of political legitimacy
  • a more general support for a regime or
    governance institution, which makes subjects
    within a clearly defined community willing to
    substitute the regimes decisions for their own
    evaluation of a situation (Bodansky 1999, 602).
  • Hence legitimacy must be for reasons of
    appropriateness rather than coercion
  • Otherwise power but not legitimacy

36
Bernstein Cashore paper
  • Paper makes two broad arguments
  • Analysis must assess effects of existing global
    social structure
  • There is exist three phases through which NSMD
    systems pass
  • Different logics regarding evaluations

37
Global Social Structure
  • Global social structure constituitive and
    regulative
  • Norms
  • Norm of sovereignty
  • Market mechanisms/international liberalism
  • Procedural norms
  • Public participation transparency
  • Rules
  • WTO trade liberal rules target governments
  • State support must be careful for risk of support
    of being declared not tariff barrier.
  • NSMD systems much more leeway
  • Technical Barriers to Trade
  • Annex 3 the Code of Good Practice for the
    Preparation, Adoption and Application of
    Standards
  • Amibiguous as to how it applies
  • Association of NSMD systems ISEAL reccommened
    to members to act in accordance

38
Three Phases
  • Distinguish strategic and norm-driven behavior
  • Merging earlier work on Suchman with March and
    Olsens work on logics of consequences and Logic
    of appropriateness
  • pictures political action as driven less by
    anticipation of its uncertain consequences and
    preferences for them than by a logic of
    appropriateness reflected in a structure of rules
    and conceptions of identities.
  • Such processes are built upon visions of civic
    identity and a framework of rule-based action.
    Embedded in this notion are ideas about the
    obligations of citizenship and office, the
    commitment to fulfill an identity without regard
    to its consequences for personal or group
    preferences or interests.1

39
Diagram 1 The Three Phases of NSMD Governance
Phase I Initiation
Phase III Political Legitimacy
Phase II Widespread Support
  • Norm generation begins to occur.
  • Explains convergence, or oscillating
    convergence/divergence
  • Strategic calculations lead to divergence of
    interests
  • Proliferation of alternative approaches
  • Participation in shared political community
  • Strategic calculations occur within, not about,
    NSMD systems
  • Convergence of strategic calculations
  • Small community

Firms
Firms
Firms
NGOs
Firms
NGOs
NGOs
NGOs
  • Characteristics
  • Strategic calculations dominate
  • Firms already closest to standards first to join
  • Conundrum
  • NGOs learn that requirements can be met and see
    them as baseline
  • Strategic Characteristics (Logic of Consequences)
  • Requires gaining support from firms whose
    practices are further away from NSMD behavioral
    requirements
  • Conundrum
  • Without strong market signals, gaining additional
    firm participation means maintaining or lowering
    requirements
  • NGOs expect increases in requirements
  • Characteristics
  • NSMD considered legitimate arena of authority
  • Strategic calculations no longer about NSMD
    authority, but about the processes and debates
    within a system that all participants accept as
    legitimate
  • Conundrum
  • None
  • Norm Generating Characteristics
  • (Logic of Appropriateness)
  • Normative pressures from level one combine with
    the emergence of shared norms and learning can
    lead to a re-definition of disparate interest and
    the prerequisites for widespread community
    building

40
How do systems move from phases I and III to III?
  • Two propositions
  • Policy learning - processes through which range
    of interests engage in common understandings
    about causal relations that might influence and
    explain policy development
  • Learning about means different than ends
  • Focusing on means first may hold promise
  • Sabatier policy learning across coalitions
  • Habermas, Rise communicative action
  • The trick is to understand when shared
    understandings form about the nature of the
    governance system itself, rather than instances
    in which the specific policies and procedures are
    remain the criteria for whether support is
    granted or withdrawn
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