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Can non-state global governance be legitimate? An analytical framework
Steven Bernstein*Benjamin Cashore
  * Department of Political Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
  School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA
Correspondence to  Steven Bernstein, Department of Political Science, University of Toronto, 100 St George Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3G3 Canada. Email: steven.bernstein@utoronto.ca.  Benjamin Cashore, Program on Forest Policy and Governance, School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University, 230 Prospect Street, Room 206, New Haven, CT 06511–2104, USA. Email: Benjamin.Cashore@yale.edu
Copyright 2007 The Authors Journal compilation
KEYWORDS
corporate social responsibility • eco-labeling • global governance • legitimacy • private authority

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionNSMD systems and their need for political legitimacyAchieving political legitimacyToward theory-building: Conditions for achieving phase IIIAppendix I

In the absence of effective national and intergovernmental regulation to ameliorate global environmental and social problems, "private" alternatives have proliferated, including self-regulation, corporate social responsibility, and public–private partnerships. Of the alternatives, "non-state market driven" (NSMD) governance systems deserve greater attention because they offer the strongest regulation and potential to socially embed global markets. NSMD systems encourage compliance by recognizing and tracking, along the market's supply chain, responsibly produced goods and services. They aim to establish "political legitimacy" whereby firms, social actors, and stakeholders are united into a community that accepts "shared rule as appropriate and justified." Drawing inductively on evidence from a range of NSMD systems, and deductively on theories of institutions and learning, we develop an analytical framework and a preliminary set of causal propositions to explicate whether and how political legitimacy might be achieved. The framework corrects the existing literature's inattention to the conditioning effects of global social structure, and its tendency to treat actor evaluations of NSMD systems as static and strategic. It identifies a three-phase process through which NSMD systems might gain political legitimacy. It posits that a "logic of consequences" alone cannot explain actor evaluations: the explanation requires greater reference to a "logic of appropriateness" as systems progress through the phases. The framework aims to guide future empirical work to assess the potential of NSMD systems to socially embed global markets.


Accepted for publication 1 August 2007.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1748-5991.2007.00021.x About DOI

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