2022
DOI: 10.1002/wcc.795
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Rethinking governance in international climate finance: Structural change and alternative approaches

Abstract: International public finance plays an increasingly prominent role in global efforts to combat climate change and, as it grows, it faces a familiar challenge: governance. Global organizations not only disburse climate funding, but are also expected to ensure the “good governance” of climate programs in recipient countries. Many of these same organizations faced similar challenges in disbursing development finance. In what became known as the “institutionalist turn,” they sought to reform governance and build ef… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Klepp & Fünfgeld, 2022). Researchers in this field argue for a fundamental reconsideration of how funders operate and how funds are distributed (Browne, 2022; Ciplet et al, 2022). For example, many communities lack the support needed to apply for funding or to complete the burdensome reporting requirements attached to most sources of funding.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Klepp & Fünfgeld, 2022). Researchers in this field argue for a fundamental reconsideration of how funders operate and how funds are distributed (Browne, 2022; Ciplet et al, 2022). For example, many communities lack the support needed to apply for funding or to complete the burdensome reporting requirements attached to most sources of funding.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While there needs to be accountability and transparency in allocation and use of funds, creating overly complex funding channels only accessible to organizations with vast financial and human resources, simply creates gatekeepers and elitism that often benefits the global North (Khan et al, 2020). Although there have been some efforts to empower national governments (Browne, 2022), the dominance of international intermediaries, like the Green Climate Fund, who design and implement large multilateral funding undermines national intermediaries from playing this role and scaling up of projects, increasing the chance they will fail to meet national and local needs (Chaudhury, 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Funder and Dupuy find that host governments can shape implementation and are better able to tilt practices towards their own preferences which may depart from the original agreement [21]. Why climate finance governance is different from development finance governance is a topic that Browne [22] has analyzed [22]. She identifies three principles that are unique to climate finance: 'restitution not aid'; allocation by developing countries; and adaptation and mitigation funding.…”
Section: Climate Finance and Policy Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%