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10 - Governing where focality is low
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- By Cornis van der Lugt, Stellenbosch University Business School Cape Town, Klaus Dingwerth, University of St. Gallen
- Edited by Kenneth W. Abbott, Arizona State University, Philipp Genschel, European University Institute, Florence, Duncan Snidal, University of Oxford, Bernhard Zangl, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munchen
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- Book:
- International Organizations as Orchestrators
- Published online:
- 05 April 2015
- Print publication:
- 02 March 2015, pp 237-261
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
Abstract
In this chapter, we assess the plausibility of the orchestration framework developed by Abbott et al. in relation to the orchestration activities of UNEP. Examining the PRI, which the UNEP Finance Initiative (UNEP FI) set up jointly with the UN Global Compact, we test the explanatory power of the hypotheses suggested in the framework chapter. Given that UNEP has been a prominent example in the early literature on orchestration, it is not surprising that the reality we observe fits well with many elements of orchestration theory. UNEP has limited capabilities; its member states have divergent goals on regulating the environmental performance of business through legally binding agreements; and state oversight of business engagement by the Paris-based UNEP Division on Technology, Industry and Economics (UNEP DTIE) and its Geneva-based UNEP FI Secretariat is moderate. This leaves those offices, both characterized by strong entrepreneurial cultures, with much leeway to experiment with innovative governance modes. Yet in the PRI case, focality worked very differently from the way Abbott et al. propose. UNEP engages in orchestration precisely in those areas where its focality is low, branching out into emerging policy areas to affirm its relevance as it confronts a more interconnected and crowded sustainability policy domain. Orchestration, we conclude, does not necessarily require thematic focality, but can also be used to compensate for its absence.