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@article{ Gehring2004,
 title = {Reforming international environmental governance: an institutionalist critique of the proposal for a World Environment Organisation},
 author = {Gehring, Thomas and Oberthür, Sebastian},
 journal = {International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics},
 number = {4},
 pages = {359-381},
 volume = {4},
 year = {2004},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s10784-004-3095-6},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-130712},
 abstract = {"This article argues that a World Environment Organisation (WEO) does not promise
to enhance international environmental governance. First, we claim that the establishment of an
international organisation alone in a policy field currently populated by regimes cannot be
expected to significantly improve environmental governance because there is no qualitative
difference between these two forms of governance institutions. Second, we submit that significant
improvement of international environmental governance through institutional rearrangement
must rely on a modification of decision-making procedures and/or a change of
institutional boundaries. Third, we develop three principal models of a possible WEO. A WEO
formally providing an umbrella for existing regimes without modifying issue-areas and decisionmaking
procedures would be largely irrelevant. A WEO integrating decision-making processes
of existing regimes so as to form comprehensive ‘world environment rounds’ of intergovernmental
bargaining would be largely dysfunctional and prone to a host of negative side-effects. A
‘supranational’ WEO including large-scale use of majority decision-making and far-reaching
enforcement mechanisms across a range of environmental issues might considerably enhance
international environmental governance, but it appears to be grossly utopian. In conclusion, a
WEO cannot be at the same time realistic, significant and beneficial for international environmental
governance. Available political resources should be invested in advancing existing and
emerging sectoral environmental regimes rather than in establishing a WEO." [author's abstract]},
 keywords = {international cooperation; institution; global governance; Global Governance; governance; Governance; Kooperation; Multilateralität; internationale Zusammenarbeit; Umwelt; multilateralism; environment; cooperation; Umweltschutz; environmental protection; Institution}}