A science-policy interface in the global south: the politics of carbon sinks and science in Brazil

被引:43
作者
Lahsen, Myanna [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Inst Space Res INPE, Ctr Earth Syst Sci, BR-12227010 Sao Jose Dos Campos, SP, Brazil
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
TROPICAL DEFORESTATION; EPISTEMIC COMMUNITIES; CLIMATE-CHANGE; CIVIL-SOCIETY; RAIN-FOREST; AMAZONIA; WORLD; CO2; ENVIRONMENT; GREENHOUSE;
D O I
10.1007/s10584-009-9610-6
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The IPCC and other global environmental assessment processes stress the need for national scientific participation to ensure decision makers' trust in the associated scientific conclusions and political agendas. The underpinning assumption is that the relationship between scientists and decision makers at the national level is characterized by trust and interpretive synergy. Drawing on ethnographic research in Brazil, this article challenges that assumption through a case study of the policy uptake of divergent scientific interpretations as to whether or not the Amazon is a net carbon sink. It shows that the carbon sink issue became a site for struggles between important Brazilian scientists and decision-makers with central authority over the definition of the country's official position in international climate negotiations. In a geopolitically charged scientific controversy involving scientific evidence bearing on the Kyoto Protocol, Brazilian decision makers studied revealed critical distance from national scientists advancing evidence that the Amazon is a net carbon sink. As such, the decision-makers' interpretations were at odds also with dominant framings in the Brazilian media and closer to those of American scientists involved in carbon cycle research in the Amazon. Seeking to explain this disconnect, the paper discusses the divergent policy preferences of key scientists and decision-makers involved, and the correlations of these preferences with interpretations of the available scientific evidence. It identifies the continued impact of a national political tradition of limited participation in decision making and suggests that this tradition-while increasingly challenged by countervailing democratizing trends-is reinforced by key Brazilian decision makers' constructions of science as a medium through which rich countries maintain political advantage. Reflecting this, key Brazilian decision-makers justified rejecting national scientists' interpretations of the Amazon as a significant overall carbon sink by suggesting that the scientists' scientific training and associated foreign interactions bias them in favor of foreign interests, compromising their ability to accurately identify national interests. The paper situates its analysis in terms of theories of the science-policy interface and argues for greater attention to the role of culturally and politically laden understandings of science and the role of science in policy and geopolitics.
引用
收藏
页码:339 / 372
页数:34
相关论文
共 111 条
[1]  
ADEODAIO S, 1990, J BRAS
[2]   EPISTEMIC COMMUNITIES, WORLD-ORDER, AND THE CREATION OF A REFLECTIVE RESEARCH-PROGRAM - CONCLUSION [J].
ADLER, E ;
HAAS, PM .
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION, 1992, 46 (01) :367-390
[3]   Biogeochemical cycling of carbon, water, energy, trace gases, and aerosols in Amazonia: The LBA-EUSTACH experiments [J].
Andreae, MO ;
Artaxo, P ;
Brandao, C ;
Carswell, FE ;
Ciccioli, P ;
da Costa, AL ;
Culf, AD ;
Esteves, JL ;
Gash, JHC ;
Grace, J ;
Kabat, P ;
Lelieveld, J ;
Malhi, Y ;
Manzi, AO ;
Meixner, FX ;
Nobre, AD ;
Nobre, C ;
Ruivo, MDLP ;
Silva-Dias, MA ;
Stefani, P ;
Valentini, R ;
von Jouanne, J ;
Waterloo, MJ .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2002, 107 (D20) :33-1
[4]  
[Anonymous], THESIS U CALIFORNIA
[5]  
[Anonymous], SOCIAL THEORIES RISK
[6]  
[Anonymous], 1993, The elusive transformation: Science, technology, and the evolution of international politics
[7]   Comparative measurements of carbon dioxide fluxes from two nearby towers in a central Amazonian rainforest:: The Manaus LBA site -: art. no. 8090 [J].
Araújo, AC ;
Nobre, AD ;
Kruijt, B ;
Elbers, JA ;
Dallarosa, R ;
Stefani, P ;
von Randow, C ;
Manzi, AO ;
Culf, AD ;
Gash, JHC ;
Valentini, R ;
Kabat, P .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2002, 107 (D20)
[8]   Increasing biomass in Amazonian forest plots [J].
Baker, TR ;
Phillips, OL ;
Malhi, Y ;
Almeida, S ;
Arroyo, L ;
Di Fiore, A ;
Erwin, T ;
Higuchi, N ;
Killeen, TJ ;
Laurance, SG ;
Laurance, WF ;
Lewis, SL ;
Monteagudo, A ;
Neill, DA ;
Vargas, PN ;
Pitman, NCA ;
Silva, JNM ;
Martínez, RV .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2004, 359 (1443) :353-365
[9]  
BARBOSA LC, 1993, J POLIT MIL SOCIOL, V21, P107
[10]  
Beck U., 1992, Risk society: Towards a new modernity