A little while back Environmental Politics carried a review by Katarina Eckerberg of The Untold Story of the World’s Leading Environmental Institution: UNEP at Fifty by Maria Ivanova (MIT Press, 2021). From the review:
UNEP’s mission was to assess the state of the environment and to inform, inspire, empower, and catalyse the UN system in environmental affairs. But why has progress been so slow? There is urgent need to critically assess what UNEP has achieved – and not – in the past 50 years, to investigate why it has yet not become sufficiently powerful in the struggle for a more sustainable world, and what can be done to improve this.
Maria Ivanova’s book helps to understand exactly those issues. It delivers profound knowledge about the functioning of international relations, politics, and administration in practice, by revealing how UNEP’s successes, crises, and turning points have been shaped by both politics, geography, and individuals within and beyond UNEP itself. The book addresses a concern at the core of international environmental politics, focusing on the history and performance of the world’s leading global environmental authority over 50 years.
Its theoretical contribution lies foremost in the thick narratives of the development of our major international environmental conventions – including reversing the depletion of the ozone layer, regional seas pollution, chemicals and waste, climate change, as well as tackling land degradation, and the loss of biodiversity and forests. By applying the concepts of capacity, connectivity, and credibility as elements of performance she guides us through both the empirical analysis and the potential ways forward. Capacity here refers to the people and resources, connectivity to infrastructure and representation, and credibility to authority and legitimacy of the institution.