民主领域的专业知识:新西兰气候变化委员会的案例

IF 1.2 4区 社会学 Q3 POLITICAL SCIENCE
D. Hall
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候变化委员会(CCC)的任务是向新西兰政府提供独立的专家建议,以提高气候变化政策的明确性和稳定性。这种制度创新有时被合理化为一种专家规则,尤其是通过与央行的类比。然而,实际上,CCC只有咨询权力,因此缺乏执行规则或操作政策工具的实际权力。那么,气候变化框架公约如何对低排放转型发挥更大的影响呢?一种选择是在专家规则模式上加倍努力——也就是说,在议会主权之外创造例外,并授权气候变化委员会作为一个技术官僚(或官僚)机构,在气候变化政策的手段(和目的)上具有独立性。随后,CCC不仅有权被相信,而且有权被服从。但这在政治上是不可能的,而且也增加了CCC对政治文化和大众媒体趋势的敏感性,这些趋势侵蚀了专家的知识特权。因此,本文提供了CCC深化其与民主纠缠的理由,以便其认识权威可以通过告知人民主权的目的来获得更大的实践权威。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Expertise within democracy: the case of New Zealand’s climate change commission
ABSTRACT The Climate Change Commission (CCC) has a mandate to provide independent, expert advice to the New Zealand Government to enhance the clarity and stability of climate change policies. This institutional innovation has occasionally been rationalised as a form of expert rule, especially by analogy with central banks. In reality, however, the CCC only has advisory powers, so lacks the practical authority to enforce rules or operate policy instruments. How then might the CCC exert greater influence on the low-emissions transition? One option is to double-down on the model of expert rule – that is, to create exceptions to parliamentary sovereignty and to empower the CCC as a technocratic (or epistocratic) institution that has independence over the means (and ends) of climate change policy. Subsequently, the CCC would have a right not only to be believed, but obeyed. But this is politically improbable and also increases the CCC’s susceptibility to trends in political culture and mass media that erode the epistemic privilege of experts. Accordingly, this paper offers reasons for the CCC to deepen its entanglement with democracy, such that its epistemic authority might achieve greater practical authority by informing the ends of popular sovereignty.
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来源期刊
Political Science
Political Science POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: Political Science publishes high quality original scholarly works in the broad field of political science. Submission of articles with a regional focus on New Zealand and the Asia-Pacific is particularly encouraged, but content is not limited to this focus. Contributions are invited from across the political science discipline, including from the fields of international relations, comparative politics, political theory and public administration. Proposals for collections of articles on a common theme or debate to be published as special issues are welcome, as well as individual submissions.
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