Representation in postcolonial analysis

  • Salazar N
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Abstract

In the years since the international climate negotiations first took up the idea of protecting and enhancing forests as a means of storing carbon, there has been a marked shift in how REDD+ has been considered and implemented. The initial focus on stand-alone mitigation projects has expanded to include efforts to support the development of national REDD+ policies. 2015 will see the culmination of this shift as REDD+ and other land-use actions are expected to feature strongly in the intended nationally determined contributions (INDCs) being prepared by UNFCCC Parties in the run-up to the next round of negotiations in Paris in December. As talks on REDD+ turn from the technical to the political and attention moves towards national commitments and action, there is a real need for institutional arrangements that facilitate REDD+ and other land-use actions. An on-going challenge for many REDD+ countries is how to establish an effective institutional framework that reconciles different, sometimes contradictory, sectoral policies into coherent, low-carbon, sustainable land management, while also ensuring that local communities are involved in shaping and administering REDD+ benefit-sharing arrangements. This issue of arborvitae includes updates on national progress on REDD+ policies and preparations for the Paris negotiations. We look at promising developments as well as potential stumbling blocks, and we include the voices and viewpoints of a range of different stakeholders involved in the international negotiations, national preparations and local consultations and actions.

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APA

Salazar, N. B. (2008). Representation in postcolonial analysis. In W. A. Darity (Ed.), International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences (2nd ed., Vol. 7, pp. 172–173). Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA. Retrieved from https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/198971

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