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Rechkemmer

Postmodern Global Governance

The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification
Nomos,  2004, 172 Pages

ISBN 978-3-8329-1032-7


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The work is part of the series Aktuelle Materialien zur Internationalen Politik (Volume 71)
29,00 € incl. VAT
Out of print, no reprint
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This book is about the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) – one of the multilateral agreements that came out of the UN Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. UNCCD is based on a conceptualization of international relations that transcends to a large extent the traditional notions of inter-governmental treaties. Such policy concepts are known under the framework of Global Governance as they allocate political action rather to the horizontal level – implying multi-actor-networks and the civil society – than to vertical or top-down processes. The study first shows that – inspired by the Brundtland Report and the emerging process of globalization – Rio was the peak season for Global Governance concepts that found their way into treaties and triggered structural reform, thus shaping a different reality of multilateral cooperation. In a second step, the book shows that the Convention to Combat Desertification is the most Global Governance oriented of all of UNCED’s outcomes. Its legally binding text contains a number of pertinent elements, ranging from a stringent cross-over of environment and development issues, via the "bottom-up approach‘, to a mix of policy tools such as mainstreamed national action programmes and partnership agreements.