South Africa’s Three Waves of Environmental Policy: (Mis)aligning the Goals of Sustainable Development, Environmental Justice and Climate Change Sustainable Development, Environmental Justice and Climate Change

Patel, Z. (2014). South Africa’s Three Waves of Environmental Policy: (Mis)aligning the Goals of Sustainable Development, Environmental Justice and Climate Change. Geography Compass, 8(3), 169–181. doi:10.1111/gec3.12119

Platform
Cape Town
Publication type
Scientific article (peer-reviewed)
DOI Title
South Africa's Three Waves of Environmental Policy: (Mis)aligning the Goals of Sustainable Development, Environmental Justice and Climate Change
Journal
Geography Compass
ISSN/ISBN
1749-8198
DOI
10.1111/gec3.12119
Author(s)
Zarina Patel
Published year
Subject
Computers in Earth Sciences Earth-Surface Processes Atmospheric Science General Social Sciences Water Science and Technology

 

Abstract

Three distinct but overlapping policy objectives have influenced environmental policy, structures and processes in contemporary large South African cities: sustainable development, environmental justice and adapting and mitigating for climate change. These goals have been characterized here as three waves of urban environmental policy. This paper responds to the position that sustainability, justice and climate change interventions must be aligned. Despite the global and national commitment to this objective, evidence suggests that environmental injustices and a lack of environmental sustainability persist in all three waves, in spite of policy efforts. What's more is that these disjunctures are not confined to South Africa, or even the global south, but are experienced globally. The wisdom behind calls for aligning these objectives is therefore questioned through a review that illustrates that despite apparent similarities between the objective of addressing environment and development concerns, the motivations behind the three waves are distinct, as are the governance arrangements and structures and tools for implementation. By focusing on the distinctions between these three modes of environmental governance, this review provides a nuanced perspective on what it means to govern the environment at the urban scale.

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