Division of Social Sciences, Yale-NUS College, 10 College Ave West #01-101, 138609, Singapore.
Department of Public Policy, City University of Hong Kong, Tat Chee Avenue, Kowloon, Hong Kong, China.
J Environ Manage. 2019 Mar 15;234:28-35. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2018.12.081. Epub 2018 Dec 29.
Much of the environmental policy literature tends to focus on democratic contexts where environmental innovation is a product of pluralistic interactions among state and non-state actors. By bringing the (authoritarian) politics into the analysis, this article seeks to discover the processes leading to environmental innovation under nondemocratic conditions. We utilise case studies in China and then-nondemocratic Malaysia, both grappling with the twin imperatives of rapid development and social control, where the governments initiated environmental innovations to expand space for public participation and monitoring against noxious plants. We adapt the conceptual framework of "environmental innovation strategies" to illustrate the mechanisms underpinning innovative practices that address environmental issues by going beyond pre-existing public regulatory provisions. We highlight aspects distinguishing the interactive processes under authoritarianism. First, the drivers of environmental innovation are contingent on the government's role and concerns over social control and state legitimacy. Second, due to limits over political space, environmental nongovernmental organisations (ENGOs) act as issue entrepreneurs-instead of policy entrepreneurs-who turn conditions into problems deserving government attention and solution, as they engage in conflictual interactions with state authorities. Third, such innovations can strengthen nondemocratic governance while not fully plugging the gaps in existing environmental regulations. This contributes to illuminating the behaviours of state-based environmental innovators under illiberal political regimes, potentially offering lessons to activists on how to stimulate further innovations in such contexts.
大多数环境政策文献往往侧重于民主背景,在这种背景下,环境创新是国家和非国家行为体之间多元化互动的产物。本文通过将(威权)政治纳入分析,旨在探索非民主条件下环境创新的形成过程。我们利用中国和当时非民主的马来西亚的案例研究,这两个国家都面临着快速发展和社会控制的双重要求,政府在这两个国家发起了环境创新,以扩大公众参与和监测有害植物的空间。我们借鉴了“环境创新战略”的概念框架,来说明通过超越现有公共监管规定来解决环境问题的创新实践的基础机制。我们强调了在威权主义下区分互动过程的各个方面。首先,环境创新的驱动力取决于政府的角色以及对社会控制和国家合法性的关注。其次,由于政治空间有限,环境非政府组织(ENGOs)充当问题企业家——而不是政策企业家——将条件转化为值得政府关注和解决的问题,因为它们与国家当局进行冲突性互动。第三,这种创新可以加强非民主治理,而不完全填补现有环境法规中的空白。这有助于阐明在非自由政治制度下基于国家的环境创新者的行为,为活动家提供在这种情况下如何进一步刺激创新的经验教训。