非政府组织作为利益集团及其在政策过程中的作用:来自印度尼西亚森林和环境治理的见解

IF 1.7 Q2 FORESTRY Forest and Society Pub Date : 2022-06-19 DOI:10.24259/fs.v6i2.19125
D. Laraswati, M. Krott, E. Soraya, S. Rahayu, M. Fisher, L. Giessen, A. Maryudi
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引用次数: 3

摘要

非政府组织(ngo)的传统概念和主张将非政府组织描述为公民社会的代表和全球南方发展的仁慈慈善行动者。然而,最近的现象表明,非政府组织的行为往往与他们的慈善主张背道而驰。本研究试图摆脱非政府组织的规范性概念,建立一个与当前环境治理经验相适应的分析框架。利用民主政治制度中有组织利益集团的理论,我们分析了非政府组织作为有组织利益集团(OIGs)履行其角色的程度,他们应该在社会中代表特定群体的利益,并在这些共同利益的基础上对政府施加政治影响。我们使用了印度尼西亚森林和环境相关治理的经验,我们的框架被称为“代表性-影响力框架”,它有助于建立更系统连贯的政府组织类型。从非政府组织声称作为社会中特定群体的代表的角度分析,我们建立了三种总体类别的非政府组织,即1)在履行要求的过程中,2)打破要求,3)反对要求。我们进一步将我们的框架细化为9种OIG类型的子集。通过这种方式,我们提供了解构对ngo的普遍简化和误解的途径。在实证方面,我们在社会林业和木材合法性政策的案例中确定了38个非政府组织,并根据类型学对它们进行了填充。我们发现,尽管他们对政府的政治影响力在大多数情况下是有限的,但他们中的大多数人正在履行代表群体利益的主张。
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Nongovernmental organizations as interest groups and their roles in policy processes: Insights from Indonesian forest and environmental governance
The traditional conceptions and claims of nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) have profiled NGOs as civil society representatives and as benevolent philanthropic actors of development in the Global South. However, recent phenomena indicate NGOs often acting in opposition to their benevolent claims. This study attempts to move away from the normative concepts of NGOs and develop an analytical framework fitted with the current empirics in environmental governance. Using theories of organized interest groups in a democratic political system, we analyze the extent of NGOs fulfilling their roles as organized interest groups (OIGs), where they should take roles representing the interests of particular groups within societies and exerting political influence on governments on the basis of these common interests. We use empirics from Indonesian forest and environment-related governance, and our framework is called “Representation–Influence Framework,” which assists in establishing more systematic coherent typologies of OIGs. Analyzed from the perspective that NGOs claim to serve as representatives of specific groups within societies, we establish three overarching categories of OIGs, that is, 1) en route to fulfilling the claim, 2) breaking the claim, and 3) opposing the claim. We further detail our framework into a subset of nine OIG typologies. In this way, we provide pathways to begin deconstructing the common simplifications and misunderstandings about NGOs. For empirics, we identified 38 OIGs in the cases of social forestry and timber legality policies and populated them according to the typologies. We found that most of them are en route to fulfilling the claim of representing the groups’ interests, although their political influence on the government is, in most cases, limited.
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来源期刊
Forest and Society
Forest and Society FORESTRY-
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
35.30%
发文量
37
审稿时长
23 weeks
期刊最新文献
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