FACETS (Jan 2024)

Compliance and enforcement in a brave new (green) world: best practices and technologies for green governance

  • Delon Omrow,
  • Michelle Anagnostou,
  • Phillip Cassey,
  • Steven J. Cooke,
  • Sheldon Jordan,
  • Andrea E. Kirkwood,
  • Timothy MacNeill,
  • Tanner Mirrlees,
  • Isabel Pedersen,
  • Peter Stoett,
  • Michael F. Tlusty

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1139/facets-2023-0105
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

Read online

International and transnational cooperation is needed to strengthen environmental governance initiatives with advanced technologies. In January 2023, Ontario Tech University hosted a symposium entitled Tech With a Green Governance Conscience: Exploring the Technology–Environmental Policy Nexus. Attendees spanned diverse disciplines, sectors, and countries, bringing unique and diverse perspectives to the technology–environmental policy nexus. Emergent themes arising from the symposium include the role of artificial intelligence in environmental governance, while eliminating the detrimental social impacts associated with these advanced technologies via algorithmic bias, misunderstanding, and unaccountability. The symposium explored the tech–society–ecology interface, such as the authoritarian intensification of digitalized environmental governance, “technocracy”, and the ethical implications of sacrificing democratic legitimacy in the face of imminent environmental destruction. Select participants (i.e., co-authors) at the symposium provided input on a preliminary framework, which led to this perspective article focused on the politics surrounding green governance in the 21st century. We conclude that while emerging technologies are being deployed to address grand environmental challenges such as climate change, biodiversity loss, and resource depletion, the use of these various technologies for progressive environmental policy development and enforcement requires co-productivist approaches to constructive technology assessments and embracing the concept of technologies of humility. This necessitates a space for dialogue, reflection, and deliberation on leading adaptive environmental governance in the face of power and politics, as we interrogate the putative neutrality of advanced technology and techno-solutionism.