模式保护流动:正式和非正式网络如何塑造跨国保护实践

Joel Persson, Siyu Qin, J. Zaehringer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

保护非政府组织(ngo)是全球保护治理的重要参与者。他们塑造资源流动,建立跨部门和跨规模的网络,并影响保护话语和实践。尽管对非政府保护组织的研究越来越多,但对非政府保护组织如何构建网络的关注却很少。在这篇文章中,我们探讨了人际社会关系,这些关系支撑着从事跨国活动的保护非政府组织的组织动态。通过对剑桥(英国)、曼谷(泰国)和万象(老挝人民民主共和国)非政府组织的保护专家进行的45次半结构化访谈,我们勾勒出两个平行且相互作用的维度:(a)制约保护流动和行动者互动的官僚和机构基础设施;(b)在遥远的地方和行动者之间形成保护模式的人际社会关系。我们说明了这种关系对于管理活动、应对意外和不可预见的事件、通过快速调动现有网络、将新行为者纳入项目活动、加强跨部门对话以将生物多样性保护纳入主流、以及接触和影响资助者等方面的重要性。由于环境保护非政府组织在不确定的条件下运作,社会关系起着至关重要的作用。我们的研究结果指出了跨国保护网络中排他性的重要维度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Patterning Conservation Flows: How Formal and Informal Networks Shape Transnational Conservation Practice
Conservation Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) are crucial actors in global conservation governance. They shape resource flows, establish cross-sector and cross-scale networks, and influence conservation discourses and practices. While research on conservation NGOs is growing, less attention has been paid to how conservation NGOs structure their networks. In this article, we interrogate the interpersonal social relationships that underpin the organisational dynamics of conservation NGOs engaged in transnational activities. Drawing on 45 semi-structured interviews with conservation professionals at NGOs based in Cambridge (UK), Bangkok (Thailand), and Vientiane (Lao PDR), we sketch two parallel and interacting dimensions: (a) the bureaucratic and institutional infrastructures that condition conservation flows and actor interactions; and (b) the interpersonal social relationships that pattern conservation flows between distant places and actors. We illustrate how such relationships are important for managing activities, responding to unexpected and unforeseen events, capitalising on funding opportunities by quickly mobilising an existing network, integrating new actors into project activities, enhancing cross-sector dialogues to mainstream biodiversity conservation, and accessing and influencing funders. Social relationships serve a crucial function due to the uncertain conditions in which conservation NGOs operate. Our results point to an important dimension of exclusion in transnational conservation networks.
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