This article examines two examples of environmental governance led by non-governmental organizations (NGOs): forestry certification by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and fishery certification by the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC). We use interviews with a range of actors in each certification network in the UK and the USA to examine how FSC and MSC use both space and science in similar (but not identical) ways. Drawing on diverse literature from geography, science and technology studies and political science, we show how certifications are spatialized differently on land (forests) and on water (ocean fisheries) and how certification units can be defined as socionatural hybrids, rather than tied to traditional territorial concerns an...
<p>The authors show how certification assembles ‘sustainable’ territories through a complex layering...
In this paper, we examine the multiple spatialities of Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certificatio...
Environmental governance denotes the processes through which different actors govern the environment...
This article examines two examples of environmental governance led by non-governmental organizations...
This article examines two examples of environmental governance led by non-governmental organizations...
There is growing scholarly interest in the role and function of non-state actors in global governanc...
In recent decades social science researchers have stressed the importance of new modes of environmen...
AbstractEco-certifications have become an important site of power struggles in commodity sectors suc...
This paper explores the externally-led vertical differentiation of third-party certification standar...
Spatial approaches gain importance in the governance of marine practices and their environmental imp...
This article analyses accountability arrangements in the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and other ...
The authors show how certification assembles ‘sustainable’ territories through a complex layering of...
This article analyses accountability arrangements in the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and other ...
Fish. Why do fish matter? Fish are the main source of protein for three billion people on Earth (Wor...
This paper compares the institutional structure of three issue areas: climate change, forestry and f...
<p>The authors show how certification assembles ‘sustainable’ territories through a complex layering...
In this paper, we examine the multiple spatialities of Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certificatio...
Environmental governance denotes the processes through which different actors govern the environment...
This article examines two examples of environmental governance led by non-governmental organizations...
This article examines two examples of environmental governance led by non-governmental organizations...
There is growing scholarly interest in the role and function of non-state actors in global governanc...
In recent decades social science researchers have stressed the importance of new modes of environmen...
AbstractEco-certifications have become an important site of power struggles in commodity sectors suc...
This paper explores the externally-led vertical differentiation of third-party certification standar...
Spatial approaches gain importance in the governance of marine practices and their environmental imp...
This article analyses accountability arrangements in the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and other ...
The authors show how certification assembles ‘sustainable’ territories through a complex layering of...
This article analyses accountability arrangements in the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and other ...
Fish. Why do fish matter? Fish are the main source of protein for three billion people on Earth (Wor...
This paper compares the institutional structure of three issue areas: climate change, forestry and f...
<p>The authors show how certification assembles ‘sustainable’ territories through a complex layering...
In this paper, we examine the multiple spatialities of Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certificatio...
Environmental governance denotes the processes through which different actors govern the environment...