Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

34
1 JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL WILDLIFE LAW AND POLICY A Taylor & Francis/Routledge Publication www.jiwlp.com EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: William C.G. Burns ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Geoffrey Wandesforde-Smith Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective Geoffrey Wandesforde-Smith, Emeritus Professor and Director Environment Program, UC Center Sacramento Wildlife Conservation, Law, and Policy Seminar Geography Graduate Group, UC Davis, Winter 2007. 1Paul Haverkamp and Margaret Swisher, Coordinators.

description

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL WILDLIFE LAW AND POLICY A Taylor & Francis/Routledge Publication www.jiwlp.com EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: William C.G. Burns ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Geoffrey Wandesforde-Smith. Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

Page 1: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

1

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL WILDLIFE LAW AND POLICYA Taylor & Francis/Routledge Publicationwww.jiwlp.com

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: William C.G. BurnsASSOCIATE EDITOR: Geoffrey Wandesforde-Smith

Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy PerspectiveGeoffrey Wandesforde-Smith, Emeritus Professor and Director

Environment Program, UC Center Sacramento

Wildlife Conservation, Law, and Policy Seminar Geography Graduate Group, UC Davis, Winter 2007. 1Paul Haverkamp and Margaret Swisher, Coordinators.

Page 2: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

2

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

Publishing is a contextual act

Part of the context is established by “ideas in good currency,” in this case in “conservation biology,” very broadly understood

Part is set by editors and reviewers, acting as gatekeepers for quality

Part is set by prospective readers and the value they find in what authors have to say

Much the most important part is set by the author(s), with fresh ideas and information to communicate

Page 3: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

3

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

1. What’s the conservation biology context?

New programs in conservation biology, like traditional biology and wildlife programs, do not adequately prepare students for success in the non-academic world (Noss 1997, Clark 2001). 

The kinds of knowledge, problem-solving approaches, and outlook that academically trained professionals bring to this difficult and important work do not square with the reality that conservation problems are social and economic, not scientific, yet biologists have traditionally been expected to solve them. (Clark 1994, Schaller 1992). 

J.A. Clark, The Endangered Species Act: its history, provisions, and effectiveness, 19-43 in ENDANGERED SPECIES RECOVERY: FINDING THE LESSONS, IMPROVING THE PROCESS (T.W. Clark, R.P. Reading, & A.L. Clarke, eds., 1994)

T.W. Clark, Developing policy-oriented curricula for conservation biology: Professional and leadership education in the public interest.  15 Conservation Biology 31 (2001).

Noss, R.F.  1997.  The failure of universities to produce conservation biologists. 11 Conservation Biology 1267 (1997).

G.B. Schaller, Field of dreams.  Wildlife Conservation (September/October, 1992) at 44.

Page 4: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

4

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

1. Conservation biology context (cont.)

Noss, a former President of the Society of Conservation Biology and former editor of the journal Conservation Biology, also asserted that: “with few exceptions, universities fail to train graduate students for problem-solving outside academia.” 

Foremost among his suggestions for improvement was that university curricula develop rigorous interdisciplinary programs and courses that encourage student familiarity with applicable state and federal environmental laws and policies. 

In addition, he suggested that universities require coursework sufficient for students to understand the philosophical underpinnings, value dimensions, and historical context of science.

Page 5: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

5

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

1. Conservation biology context (cont.)

Wow! That’s a tall order! Obviously, both the critics and everyone else associated

with conservation biology education want graduate students to succeed as scientists and to make a difference in the world

Equally obviously, the completion of a master’s thesis or doctoral dissertation equips people with the skill sets they need to be credentialed as a “conservation biologist” in the academic world

So, if a student wants to become credentialed in the academic world and make a difference in the real world, what is he or she to do? More years of study in law and policy and philosophy and values and history and………?

Page 6: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

6

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

1. Conservation biology context (cont.)

One way to demonstrate the relevance in the real world of a research project primarily meant to satisfy the requirements of the academic world – without spending X additional years as a student -- is to publish something about the project in a law and policy journal

Reprints are highly valuable assets They can be shared They show seriousness of purpose They demonstrate writing skills They are a sign of professionalism

Page 7: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

7

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

1. Conservation biology context (cont.)

Publishing is not everyone’s cup of tea. Assuming you want to

proceed…….questions arise What are wildlife law and policy journals

publishing? Which journals do this sort of thing? And what exactly would be involved in

developing a publication out of a thesis/dissertation project or a manuscript you have tucked away in a drawer?

Page 8: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

8

International Regimes(top down)

The State

Communities (bottom up)

The Market(e.g. certification

and labeling)

2. The law and policy context

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tled

ge P

ublic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

Page 9: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

9

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

2.A. The view from the state

If wildlife conservation requires legislation, and subsequently regulation (of how hunters behave, say) and management (of critical species and habitats), then it requires the exercise of state sovereignty

The evolution of the state’s role (federal and state in the U.S.) in wildlife conservation has

received a lot of scholarly attention.

Page 10: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

10

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

2.A. Some landmark texts

Michael Bean & Melanie Rowland, THE EVOLUTION OF NATIONAL WILDLIFE LAW, 3d ed. (1997)

Thomas Lund, AMERICAN WILDLIFE LAW (1980) Thomas Dunlap, SAVING AMERICA’S WILDLIFE:

ECOLOGY AND THE AMERICAN MIND, 1850-1990 (1988) Dale Goble & Eric Freyfogle, WILDLIFE LAW (2002) John Nagle & J.B. Ruhl, THE LAW OF BIODIVERSITY

AND ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT (2002) The wildlife and biodiversity conservation chapters of

general environmental law texts, such as Thomas Schoenbaum, Ronald Rosenberg & Holly Doremus, ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY LAW, 4th ed. (2002)

Page 11: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

11

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

2.A. The story told by the texts Increasing state intervention, beginning with the Progressive

Era and the rise of conservation “science” [1890s-1920s] Increasing unhappiness over the first half of the twentieth

century with the “capture” of state wildlife agencies by consumption interests (hunters, sports fishermen, commercial fishermen) [1930s-1960s]

Increasing assertion of “federal jurisdiction” to protect species and to assert existence values, subsequent to the emergence of ecology as a management science [1970s-1980s]

Increasing reaction to the costs of biodiversity conservation and ecosystem management, especially by property owners

Increasing interest in “new forms of governance” for wildlife conservation (planning, stewardship, partnership, certification/labeling)

Page 12: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

12

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

2.B The state view outside the U.S.

Single state focus: landmark texts

• Rosaleen Duffy, KILLING FOR CONSERVATION: WILDLIFE POLICY IN ZIMBABWE (2000)

• William Beinart, THE RISE OF CONSERVATION IN SOUTH AFRICA: SETTLERS, LIVESTOCK, AND THE ENVIRONMENT 1770-1950 (2003)

Page 13: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

13

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

2.B. The state view outside the U.S. (cont.)

Comparative state focus: some landmark texts• Thomas Dunlap, NATURE AND THE ENGLISH

DIASPORA: ENVIRONMENT AND HISTORY IN THE UNITED STATES, CANADA, AUSTRALIA, AND NEW ZEALAND (1999)

• Clark Gibson, POLITICIANS AND POACHERS: THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF WILDLIFE POLICY IN AFRICA (1999). [Zambia, Kenya, Zimbabwe]

• James Fairhead & Melissa Leach, SCIENCE, SOCIETY AND POWER: ENVIRONMENTAL KNOWLEDGE AND POLICY IN WEST AFRICA AND THE CARIBBEAN (2003). [Guinea and Trinidad]

Page 14: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

14

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

2.B.The story told outside the U.S.

The exercise of state sovereignty for wildlife conservation outside the U.S. has some similarities to the story in the U.S.

• Most notably, consistent evidence of domestic law and policy being shaped by science and scientists

• Similarly consistent evidence of domestic law and policy being shaped by international environmental NGOs

• World Conservation Union (IUCN)• World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)• Wildlife Conservation Society• Fauna and Flora International• International Fund for Animal Welfare

Page 15: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

15

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

2.B.The story told outside the U.S. (cont.)

There are also significant differences, however, especially in developing countries

• State capacity is sapped by lack of resources (economic and social capital) and corruption. State formulation of laws and policies is, therefore, difficult. Implementation is even more difficult.

• Domestic civil society and public opinion are weak to non-existent policy drivers and usually eclipsed by international NGOs, usually closely allied with the scientific community, and aid agencies

• Since WSSD (Johannesburg 2002), equity, distributional, and indigenous peoples issues have become impossible to ignore.

• State weakness has not been bolstered by the imposition of “neoliberal conditionalities”

Page 16: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

16

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

3. The international law view

The notion that wildlife and biodiversity conservation can be most effectively addressed through international law, while it has some history, is more recent than the turn to action at the level of the state

{Note parenthetically that under international regimes implementation remains primarily a state responsibility}

Page 17: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

17

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

3. Some landmark texts

Simon Lyster, INTERNATIONAL WILDLIFE LAW (1985, 1993)

• ICRW (1931, 1946), Seals & Polar Bears, Birds, Vicuna

• Western Hemisphere Convention (1942), African Convention (1900, 1933, 1968), European Convention on Wildlife and Habitats (Berne 1979), Antarctic Marine Living Resources (1980)

• Wetlands (Ramsar 1971), World Heritage (1972), CITES (1973), Migratory Species (1979)

• N.B. the date of the UN Conference on the Human Environment, Stockholm 1972, and the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro 1992

Page 18: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

18

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

3. Some landmark texts (cont.)

David Hunter, James Salzman & Durwood Zaelke, INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW AND POLICY, 2d ed. (2002) [new edition late 2006]

Philippe Sands, PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW, 2d ed. (2003)

• “Biodiversity Conservation” has come to encompass both species and habitats

• Traditional focus on charismatic megafauna clearly extended to other animals and plants

• Centerpiece Treaty: Convention on Biological Diversity (1992), to which the U.S. is not a party

Page 19: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

19

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

3. The international story

International law was much favored as an instrument for wildlife conservation in the late 1960s and early 1970s

This was a period when the political mobilization of environmentalists in the U.S. spilled over into the international arena and carried with it the same deep faith in the efficacy of law as an instrument of environmental change that was evident in the “great age” of American environmental law making

Much of the momentum at the international level had been lost, however, when the Earth Summit convened in Rio de Janeiro, 1992.

Why?

Page 20: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

20

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

3. The international story (cont.) Increasingly forceful advocacy of countervailing interests in

development The recognition and assertion of state “incapacity” A general desire, stimulated by the Rio Earth Summit, for

laws and policies that advance “sustainability” coupled with an inability to operationalize the concept, which stymied the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg in 2002

A lack of MEA articulation and coordination Complexity of cross-cutting issues: Traditional knowledge

and intellectual property; International Trade; Gender; Invasive species.

Increasing interest in “new forms of governance” for wildlife/biodiversity conservation (planning, stewardship, partnership, certification/labeling)

Page 21: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

21

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

4. The view from the market

Application of market-like thinking to wildlife and biodiversity conservation is relatively recent

• Signaled by: Michael J. Glennon, Has International Law Failed the Elephant? 84 AM. J. INT’L LAW 1-43 (1990)

• Landmark text: Benjamin Cashore, Graeme Auld & Deanna Newsom, GOVERNING THROUGH MARKETS: FOREST CERTIFICATION AND THE EMERGENCE OF NON-STATE AUTHORITY (2004)

Page 22: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

22

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

4. The view from the market (cont.) Has at least two principal themes The certification and labeling of goods as a

signal to markets that the associated production, distribution, and consumption processes are “sustainable”

• Forest Stewardship Council, Marine Stewardship Council, wine and grapes, organic foods, coffee, biofuels, green buildings, sports industries

The “pricing” of ecosystem services as a signal to decision makers that they need no longer (as they have in the past) treat the environment as a free good

• See www.ecosystemmarketplace.com and www.ecosystemservicesproject.org

Page 23: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

23

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

4. The view from the market (cont.) The development of certification and labeling is much

further along than markets for ecosystem services Indeed, “Emerging governance systems are

overrunning several classical divisions of regulation, and indeed of law – between states, firms, and the public, and between national and international domains.” (Meidinger 2006)

“Conventionally labeled as ‘self-governance’ because they are organized around global product chains, the programs also incorporate a growing variety of non-economic interests [multiple stakeholders] from around the world in policy making and implementation and often compete with each other within economic sectors.” (Ibid.)

Page 24: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

24

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

4. The view from the market (cont.) Even as certification and labeling gain support there are

serious issues to be resolved (Adapted from ibid.) Effectiveness (whose problems are being solved?)

• Evidence that multi-interest self-governance systems are effectuating behavioral change grows steadily stronger, but it does not follow that they are ‘solving’ the problems they seek to address.

Accountability (what if voluntarism fails?)• Perhaps multi-interest self-governance systems are evolving

accountability based on learning and adaptability, and will somehow answer to a newly emerging transnational citizenry…while effectively addressing problems. Or it may turn out that skeptics are correct; the new systems effectively answer to no one, or only to already privileged social interests.

Legitimacy (who elected these people, anyway?)• Multi-interest self-governance systems rely heavily on mimicking well-

established institutions – primarily those of standard setting and certification and the best practices of government regulatory institutions.

Page 25: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

25

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

5. The view from the community level

Bypass in this presentation Except to say (1) that in the domestic context in

advanced economies, while many, vigorous local initiatives are evident, they may have “nowhere to go,” in a hostile national political climate (e.g. the U.S.)

And (2) that the bloom is off the rose of Community-Based Natural Resources Management (CBNRM), and its many acronymic variants, in the context of developing countries

• See Arielle Levine & Geoffrey Wandesforde-Smith, Wildlife, Markets, States, and Communities in Africa: Looking Beyond the Invisible Hand, 7 JIWLP 135, at 140-142 (2004)

Page 26: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

26

International Regimes(top down)

The State

Communities (bottom up)

The Market(e.g. certification

and labeling)

From the perspective of at least one editor, then, the leading law and policy questions conservation biology research ought to tackle are (a) those that promise to build state capacity and (b) those that evaluate market mechanisms as “substitutes” for state initiatives.

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tled

ge P

ublic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

Page 27: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

27

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

Given the validity or at least plausibility of the preceding analysis, how do the seminar presentations stack up?Remarkably well!Take some examples (both seen and heard)

• Mulder• Giles• Swarner

Melding of research methodology and political process sensibilities

Page 28: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

28

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

Mulder

On the face of it, a remarkable opportunity to contribute to our understanding of how the methodology of certification evolves and the process of extending it to a new commercial sector, namely wildlife-based sports industries

Could a way be found to focus an article (the research will clearly yield more than one) on the legitimacy of certification – why from the perspective of the Tanzanian public interest is it better to certify than to regulate?

Page 29: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

29

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

Giles

A dazzling display of how the ingenious development of research methodology has the potential to transform the process by which the (alarming) intrusiveness of the “marine mammal watching industry” is regulated (not)

However, no data presented on actual regulation in the U.S./Canada, say, or New Zealand. So, could the focus be on the methodology, with a short suggestion of how it might be applied?

Page 30: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

30

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

Swarner

An impressive showing of how field research and survey methodologies can be combined to rethink and re-evaluate the process by which compensation is implemented to control wild dog predation

But where’s the history – the recognition that controlling predation by dogs on livestock has a long history in southern Africa? And could the impact of this new research be enhanced by linking it to that earlier work?

William Beinart, The Night of the Jackal, ch. 6 in THE RISE OF CONSERVATION IN SOUTH AFRICA (2003)

Page 31: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

31

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

The Mulder, Giles, and Swarner examples point to the desirability and feasibility of a special issue of JIWLP the title of which might be

“Paving the Road for Good Intentions in Biodiversity Conservation: Innovative Research Methodology and Policy Process Reform”

Page 32: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

32

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

The publication process Form an editorial committee, May ’07 Agree on clear article focus, June ’07 Clean draft manuscripts, Sept. ’07 Editorial committee and peer review,

complete by Dec. ‘07 Clean manuscripts upload, Feb. ’08 Proofs available, April ’08 Issue appears as 11(3) JIWLP 2008 by

about Sept. ’08 Identify additional articles/issues, Ongoing

Page 33: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

33

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith

Page 34: Notes on Publishing Pieces with a Law and Policy Perspective

34

JOU

RN

AL

OF

INT

ER

NA

TIO

NA

L W

ILD

LIF

E L

AW

AN

D P

OL

ICY

A T

aylo

r &

Fra

ncis

/Rou

tledg

e Pu

blic

atio

nw

ww

.jiw

lp.c

omE

DIT

OR

-IN

-CH

IEF:

Pro

fess

or W

illia

m C

.G. B

urns

ASS

OC

IAT

E E

DIT

OR

: Pro

fess

or G

eoff

rey

Wan

desf

orde

-Sm

ith