Assignment 1
Semester 2
Due 25 August 2025
,LEG2601
Assignment 1
Semester 2 2025
DUE 25 August 2025
CLARITY CRAFTED
Environmental Governance: A Strategic Imperative for Our Planet’s Future
1. Definition and Evolving Scope
Environmental governance is not simply environmental policy; it is the architecture
through which authority, accountability, and decision-making are structured around
environmental issues. In contrast to traditional state-centric models, contemporary
environmental governance is polycentric, involving multiple actors across scales—
governments, corporations, NGOs, scientific communities, and indigenous groups.
What makes this relevant in 2025 is the urgency of planetary-scale crises such as
climate feedback loops, biodiversity collapse, and water scarcity, which require
governance systems that are adaptive, participatory, and grounded in both science and
justice. The recognition of polycentric systems, as articulated by Elinor Ostrom, reflects
the understanding that decentralized, nested governance structures are more
responsive and resilient than top-down models.
2. Key Principles in Practice
Embedding the environment in all decisions
This principle calls for the environmental implications of all policies and investments—
whether related to infrastructure, health, or trade—to be considered from the outset.
Singapore’s Green Urbanism Scorecard is a current example of how national planning
tools are being reoriented to prioritize ecological metrics alongside economic growth.
, Conceptualizing human systems as ecological subsystems
Understanding that human activities are part of larger ecological systems reframes
governance challenges. The COVID-19 pandemic, for instance, was not only a public
health crisis but a failure to manage the ecological interfaces between human and
wildlife systems. This principle reinforces the need for systemic thinking that views
economic and political systems as embedded within, not separate from, ecological
limits.
Recognizing human-ecosystem interdependence
Legal innovations such as the personhood of the Whanganui River in New Zealand
illustrate how governance can institutionalize respect for ecological systems. This
principle aligns governance with the recognition that human well-being is inextricably
linked to ecosystem services such as clean water, pollination, and carbon
sequestration.
Shifting to sustainable and circular practices
Linear economies are incompatible with ecological sustainability. Cities like Amsterdam
are applying doughnut economics to align municipal policies with planetary boundaries.
Circular governance frameworks encourage innovation in waste reduction, sustainable
design, and closed-loop supply chains, translating environmental principles into
operational systems.
3. Core Dimensions That Determine Success or Failure
Institutional integration
Environmental governance often fails when institutional mandates conflict or remain
siloed. Fragmented climate, agriculture, and economic policies can produce
contradictory outcomes. Effective governance integrates environmental objectives into
ministries of finance, planning, and trade to ensure coherent action.