Architectures of Earth System Governance: Setting the Stage

Publication date

2020-04-17

Authors

Biermann, FrankORCID 0000-0002-0292-0703ISNI 0000000081139784
Kim, Rakhyun E.ORCID 0000-0002-1308-6849ISNI 0000000423056162

Editors

Biermann, Frank
Kim, Rakhyun E.

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
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License

Abstract

Over the past decades, international institutions, such as treaties and regimes, have proliferated in global governance, and we have seen a tremendous amount of studies on their emergence, maintenance and effectiveness. Increasingly it has become evident, however, that such institutions do not operate in a void but within complex webs of larger governance settings. These large web-like structures, or ‘governance architectures’, are important to understand because they shape, enable and at times hinder the functioning of single international institutions and are crucial variables in determining the overall effectiveness of global governance. In recent years, this concept of governance architecture has effectively shifted the debate to situations in which an area is regulated by multiple institutions and norms in complex settings. This introductory chapter offers conceptual clarity about global governance architectures and their structural features as well as an overview of key insights gained through the last decade of research. We also identify key methodological approaches, challenges, and advances in this field of study.

Keywords

Governance architecture, performance, fundamental norms, multi-level governance, architectural voids, architectural interaction, Taverne

Citation

Biermann, F & Kim, R E 2020, Architectures of Earth System Governance : Setting the Stage. in F Biermann & R E Kim (eds), Architectures of Earth System Governance : Institutional Complexity and Structural Transformation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 1-34. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108784641.001