Archive for the ‘Governance’ category

Fighting pollution on the Pearl River

September 29th, 2009

The following article from Chinadialogue highlights the environmental governance structure’s limitation to environmental protection. And it uses Pan-Pearl River Delta cooperation project to illustrate these points. The suggestions are valid, but it still does not resolve the conflict between the central government’s agenda to prioritize economic development over environmental protection.

However in 2004, a group of 11 provinces and administrative regions along the Pearl River Basin, in southern China, joined together in a unique, bottom-up initiative. Members of the Pan-Pearl River Delta (PPRD) declared their willingness to cooperate in water pollution abatement and sustainable development. This suggested a new path for environmental resource management in China. But five years on, did this approach really represent a new horizon for managing transboundary rivers in China? Or did institutional issues still constrain the project?

Existing economic interdependencies between the provinces and their platform of cooperation – the PPRD economic development agreement – have allowed the promotion of cooperation in environmental protection in the region. But why has this cooperation not yielded active joint action to fight water pollution? I suggest that the main reasons for this limited cooperation are: the dependence of the EPBs on funding from local governments; the unwillingness of local governments of poorer upstream provinces to invest in joint efforts to reduce pollution; the inability of Guangdong province to oblige upstream provinces to act, because of the hierarchical rank structure of the respective governments; the unwillingness of Guangdong, though a rich province, to bear the burden of the costs of regional cooperation; and the efforts of Guangdong, as well as other provinces, to shift the responsibility for funding on to the central government.

Thus, the existing governance structure in China limits even this bottom-up initiative for environmental cooperation. It is also unlikely that this structure will be significantly reformed in the near future, since the central government continues to focus on strengthening its central power. However, under the existing structure there are some steps which could be taken to promote environmental cooperation and improve sustainable management of environmental resources in China.

First, environmental protection efforts should be included in the evaluation of local government officials, to enhance their incentives to invest in environmental protection programmes. Second, the independence of the MEP and EPBs should be strengthened through direct funding of their operations, in order to help them act independently of local governments and enhance their enforcement of regulations on environmental protection across China. Finally, the central government could improve the incentives of provinces and localities to participate in cooperative mechanisms, such as the PPRD. The central government could provide support both in clear administrative recognition of such mechanisms – and in financial assistance when it is needed.

via Fighting pollution on the Pearl River | Reut Barak – China Dialogue.

China city ‘to open up to media’

September 16th, 2009

Greater transparency and access to information for the media in Shenzhen, my hometown.

Government officials in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen will soon be required to be more accountable to the media, the city has announced.

From 1 December, officials could be sacked or reprimanded if they do not respond quickly to media requests.

Chinese media is tightly controlled by the state and independent investigative reporting is rare.

Shenzhen’s policy follows a relaxation of restrictions on foreign journalists after the Beijing Olympics.

“We are determined to change the random, passive and disorderly situation surrounding government press releases,” Su Huijun, the director of Shenzhen’s municipal press office, said.

“Shenzhen’s regulation will provide a meaningful experiment for this issue in China,” Mr Su was quoted as saying by China Daily, the country’s main state-run English language newspaper.

via BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | China city ‘to open up to media’.

‘Athens’ on the Net

September 16th, 2009

Thanks to Alastair for forwarding this article to me because it thoughtfully presents the enabling power and the dangers of the internet in influencing on our society’s political governance.

One thing that strikes me in this article assumes or interprets that democracy and the internet will enable everyone to have a voice and every voice is equal. This is the assumption behind the idea of crowdsourcing or “wisdom of the crowds.” While I do not disagree with the validity of these ideas in certain areas of applications, they should not override the fact that there are differences within the crowd. There will be people of greater expertise in the crowd than others. To simply deny the differences is a denial of such a reality.

I believe that internet applications need to allow us to zoom into the crowd and see the individuals. We should be able to distinguish one from another in the online mass. Trust is enabled when we come to know the individuals, which is brought up in the documentary file.

12giri.1902 ‘Athens’ on the Net “Can we all govern?” the movie asks at the outset. (It can, of course, be viewed on the Web.)

The people in this camp point to information technology’s aid to grassroots movements from Moldova to Iran. They look at India, where voters can now access, via text message, information on the criminal records of parliamentary candidates, and Africa, where cellphones are improving election monitoring. They note the new ease of extending reliable scientific and scholarly knowledge to a broad audience. They observe how the Internet, in democratizing access to facts and figures, encourages politician and citizen alike to base decisions on more than hunches.

Another camp sees the Internet less rosily. Its members tend to be enthusiastic about the Web and enthusiastic about civic participation; they are skeptical of the Internet as a panacea for politics. They worry that it creates a falsely reassuring illusion of equality, openness, universality.

via ‘Athens’ on the Net – NYTimes.com.