Abstract
Developing countries did not start off as demandeurs of global environmental governance. Although they are still rather skeptical about the global environmental enterprise, they have come a long way from being the vigorous contestants that they were three decades ago. This fascinating evolution has not only changed the views of developing countries but has also transformed the shape of the global environmental discourse, most significantly by turning what used to be global environmental politics into what is now the global politics of sustainable development. This paper charts this evolution by using the twin conceptual lenses of effectiveness and legitimacy and the heuristic markers of the three key global conferences on the global environment (Stockholm 1972; Rio de Janeiro 1992; Johannesburg 2002). The paper argues that the pre-Stockholm era was exemplified by a politics of contestation by the South; the Stockholm-to-Rio period was a period of reluctant participation as a new global compact emerged around the notion of sustainable development; and the post-Rio years have seen the emergence of more meaningful, but still hesitant, engagement by the developing countries in the global environmental project but very much around the promise and potential of actualizing sustainable development.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
A. O. Adede (1992) ArticleTitle‘International Environmental Law from Stockholm to Rio’ Environmental Policy and Law 22 IssueID2 88–105
A. Agarwal S. Narain A. Sharma (Eds) (1999) Green Politics: Global Environmental Negotiations 1 Centre for Science and Environment New Delhi
M. Ayoob (1995) ArticleTitle‘The New-Old Disorder in the Third World’ Global Governance 1 IssueID1 59–77
T. Banuri A. Najam (2002) Civic Entrepreneurship: A Civil Society Perspective on Sustainable Development Gandhara Academy Press Islamabad
Banuri, T. (1992), Noah’s Ark or Jesus’s Cross? Working Paper WP/UNCED/1992/1, (Sustainable Development Policy Institute, Islamabad, Pakistan
P. Chasek (2001) ArticleTitle‘NGO and State Capacity in International Environmental Negotiations: The Experience of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin’ Review of European Community and International Environmental Law 2 168–176
R. Clarke L. Timberlake (1982) Stockholm Plus Ten: Promises, Promises? Earthscan London
E. Corell (1999) The Negotiable Desert: Expert Knowledge in the Negotiations of the Convention to Combat Desertification Linkoping University Linkoping, Sweden
A. Cosbey S. Burgiel (2000) The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety: An Analysis of Results, IISD Briefing Note International Institute for Sustainable Development Winnipeg, Canada
D. R. Fisher J. F. Green (2004) ArticleTitle‘Understanding Disenfranchisement: Civil Society and Developing Countries’ Influence and Participation in Global Governance for Sustainable Development’ Global Environmental Politics 4 IssueID3 65–84 Occurrence Handle10.1162/1526380041748047
Founex (1972), Development and Environment: Report and Working Papers of Experts Convened by the Secretary General of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment. Founex, Switzerland, June 4–12, 1971, Mouton, Paris
C. Geldart P. Lyon (1980) ArticleTitle‘The Group of 77: A Perspective View’ International Affairs 57 IssueID1 79–101
C. Grant (1995) ArticleTitle‘Equity in International Relations: A Third World Perspective’ International Affairs 71 IssueID3 567–87
J. Gupta (2000) On Behalf of My Delegation: A Survival Guide for Developing Country Climate Negotiators International Institute for Sustainable Development Winnipeg, Canada
P. Gutman (2003) ArticleTitle‘What did WSSD Accomplish? An NGO Perspective’ Environment 45 IssueID2 20–28
R. D. Hansen (1979) Beyond the North-South Stalemate McGraw-Hill New York
C. Helm D. Sprinz (2000) ArticleTitle‘Measuring the Effectiveness of International Environmental Regimes’ Journal of Conflict Resolution 44 630–652
S. Hecht A. Cockburn (1992) ArticleTitle‘Rhetoric and Reality in Rio’ The Nation 254 IssueID24 848–854
D. A. Kay E. B. Skolnikoff (1972) World Eco-crisis: International Organizations in Response. University of Wisconsin Press Madison
S. D. Krasner (1987) Structural Conflict: The Third World Against Global Liberalism University of California Press Berkeley
Mahbub-ul-Haq (1976) The Poverty Curtain. Columbia University Press New York
B. P. Menon (1977) Global Dialogue: The New International Order. Pergamon Press London
Mensah, C. K. (1994), ‘The Role of Developing Countries’, in Campigio, ed., (pp. 33–53). London: Graham and Trotman.
E. L. Miles A. Underdal S. Andresen J. Wettestad J. Skjaerseth E. M. Carlin (2002) Environmental Regime Effectiveness: Confronting Theory with Evidence MIT Press Cambridge Mass
M. A. L. Miller (1995) The Third World in Global Environmental Politics Lynne Rienner Boulder
R. B. Mitchell (2003) ArticleTitle‘International Environmental Agreements: A Survey of their Features, Formation, and Effects’ Annual Review of Environment and Resources 28 429–461 Occurrence Handle10.1146/annurev.energy.28.050302.105603
W. R. Moomaw. 1997.’ Will there be Stranded Opportunities in Kyoto?’, Human Environment IV(4)
C. Murphy (1984) The Emergence of the NIEO Ideology Westview Press Boulder
A. Najam C. W. R. Ioli Moomaw (2004) ArticleTitle‘The Emergent ‘System’ of Global Environmental Governance’ Global Environmental Politics 4 IssueID4 23–35
A. Najam J. M. Poling N. Yamagishi D. G. Straub J. Sarno S. M. DeRitter E. M. Kim (2002) ArticleTitle‘From Rio to Johannesburg: Progress and Prospects’ Environment 44 IssueID7 26–38
Najam, A. (1994), The Case for a South Secretariat in International Environmental Negotiation, Program on Negotiation Working Paper 94–8, Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Mass
A. Najam (1995) ArticleTitle‘An Environmental negotiation strategy for the South’ International Environmental Affairs 7 IssueID3 249–87
A. Najam (2002a) ArticleTitle‘The Unraveling of the Rio Bargain’ Politics and the Life Sciences 21 IssueID2 46–50
A. Najam (2002b) Knowledge Needs for Better Multilateral Environmental Agreements International Institute for Environment and Development London
A. Najam. (2003a). ‘The Collective South in Multinational Environmental Politics’. In: S. Nagel, ed., (pp. 197--240). Lanham: Lexington Books
A. Najam (2003b) ArticleTitle‘The Case Against a New International Environmental Organization’ Global Governance 9 IssueID3 367–384
A. Najam (2004a) The View from the South: Developing Countries in Global Environmental Politics R. Axelrod D. L. Downie N. J. Vig (Eds) The Global Environment: Institutions, Law and Policy Congressional Quarterly Press Washington, DC 224–243
A. Najam (2004b) ArticleTitle‘Dynamics of the Southern Collective: Developing Countries in Desertification Negotiations’ Global Environmental Politics 4 IssueID3 128–154 Occurrence Handle10.1162/1526380041748100
Najam, A. (2005), ‘Why Environmental Politics Looks Different from the South’, in Peter Dauvergne, ed., Handbook of Global Environmental Politics? (pp. 111–126). Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Press
J. K. Nyerere (1980) ‘Unity for a New Order’ K. Haq (Eds) Dialogue for a New Order Pergamon Press New York 3–10
C. Pell C. Case (1972) Report to the U.S. Senate on the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment US Government Printing Office Washington, D.C
Peng, M. K. K. (1991), The Global Environment Crisis: A Third World Perspective, UNCED Briefing Paper No. 5, Third World Network, Penang, Malaysia
D. Pirages (1978) Global Ecopolitics: The New Context for International Relations Duxbury Press North Scituate
G. Porter J.W. Brown P.S. Chasek (Eds) (2000) Global Environmental Politics EditionNumber3 Westview Press Boulder
W. Rowland (1973) The Plot to Save the World Clarke, Irwin & Co Toronto
W. H. Sachs F. Acselrad A. Akhter T.B.G. Amon H. Egziabher P. French P. Haavisto H. Hawken A. Henderson S. Khosla R. Larrain A. Loske V. Roddick C. Taylor Weizsacker Particlevon S. Zabelin (2002) The Jo’burg Memo: Fairness in a Fragile World Heinrich Boll Foundation Berlin
R. Sandbrook (1997) ArticleTitle‘UNGASS has run out of steam’ International Affairs 3 IssueID4 641–54
K. P. Sauvant (1981) The Group of 77: Evolution, Structure, Organization Oceana Publications New York
InstitutionalAuthorNameSouth Commission (1990) The Challenge to the South: The Report of the South Commission Oxford University Press Oxford
L. E. Susskind (1994) Environmental Diplomacy: Negotiating More Effective Global Agreements Oxford University Press New York
C. Thomas (1983) In Search of Security: The Third World in International Relations Rienner Boulder
InstitutionalAuthorNameUNEP (1982) Uniterra, Special Issue: Stockholm Revisited UNEP Nairobi, Kenya
O. R. Young (Eds) (1999) Effectiveness of International Environmental regimes: Causal Connections and Behavioral Mechanisms MIT Press Cambridge, Mass
D. G. Victor K. Raustiala E. B. Skolnikoff (Eds) (1998) The Implementation and Effectiveness of International Environmental Commitments: Theory and Practice MIT Press Cambridge, Mass
InstitutionalAuthorNameWCED (1987) Our Common Future: Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development Oxford University Press New York
M. Williams (1993) ArticleTitle‘Re-articulating the Third World Coalition: The Role of the Environmental Agenda’ Third World Quarterly 14 IssueID1 7–29
J. Wilson V. Munnik (2003) The World Comes to One Country – An Insider History of the World Summit on Sustainable Development Heinrich Boll Foundation Berlin
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Additional information
The author is grateful to an anonymous review, and to Steinar Andresen, Ellen Hey, and Jessica Green for valuable comments.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Najam, A. Developing Countries and Global Environmental Governance: From Contestation to Participation to Engagement. Int Environ Agreements 5, 303–321 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10784-005-3807-6
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10784-005-3807-6