Publications

Policy without politics: technocratic control of climate change adaptation policy making in Nepal

Climate Policy

DOI:10.1080/14693062.2014.1003775
By Hemant R. Ojha, Sharad Ghimire, Adam Pain, Andrea Nightingale, Dil B. Khatri & Hari Dhungana
Published online: 24 Feb 2015

Abstract:
As developing countries around the world formulate policies to address climate change, concerns remain as to whether the voices of those most exposed to climate risk are represented in those policies. Developing countries face significant challenges for contextualizing global-scale scientific research into national political dynamics and downscaling global frameworks to sub-national levels, where the most affected are presumed to live. This article critiques the ways in which the politics of representation and climate science are framed and pursued in the process of climate policy development, and contributes to an understanding of the relative effectiveness of globally framed, generic policy mechanisms in vulnerable and politically volatile contexts. Based on this analysis, it also outlines opportunities for the possibility of improving climate policy processes to contest technocratic framing and generic international adaptation solutions.

Available at:  http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14693062.2014.1003775#.VPA5xnyUfZa