Authors
Lisa Westholm
Publication date
2017
Journal
Acta Universitatis Agriculturae Sueciae
Issue
2017: 74
Description
REDD+ (Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) is an instrument under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) aimed at conserving tropical forests and the carbon stored in them. Respect for local communities, poverty reduction and gender sensitivity are explicit ambitions of the program. In this thesis I examine global policies and governance relating to REDD+. I inquire into the potential for drawing on these policies to promote a transformation of unequal gender relations. The study is based on analysis of documents relating to global REDD+ policy, and to women’s organisations advocating for gender to be taken into account in REDD+ policymaking. It also includes a case study of Burkina Faso’s national REDD+ program comprising analysis of documents, interviews with policy makers and villagers involved in REDD+ policy making and implementation, as well as participation in national and local REDD+ meetings. Based on this, I examine the formulation of problems and the solutions proposed in relation to gender, in the official discourses on gender in REDD+ and climate policy, as well as in attempts at challenging the mainstream discourse. Drawing on the concepts of social and natural reproduction, I show how market-based discourses risk contributing to the displacement of responsibilities for reproductive work in the household and in the forest, from rich to poor, from North to South, and from men to women. To characterize this transfer of responsibilities I introduce the concept of “global environmental care chains”, which sheds light on the global linkages of rights and …
Total citations
20182019202032
Scholar articles
L Westholm - Acta Universitatis Agriculturae Sueciae, 2017