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Title
Genesis and anatomy of the industrial biofuels strategy of South Africa |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/10662 |
Date
2014 |
Author(s)
Ruysenaar, Shaun Henry |
Contributor(s)
Smith, James; Dritsas, Lawrence; Van Gardingen, Paul; Cannon Collins Trust; Commonwealth Scholarship from the
British Government. |
Abstract
Instrumental accounts of policy start at the policy document'the framework for action'
and move on from there, identifying gaps, criticising shortcomings or praising proposals.
Critical and interpretive reviews of policymaking regard it as a process to be examined
rather than an outcome to be managed. At the core of this thesis, the Biofuels Industrial
Strategy of South Africa presents a new terrain in which to examine the policy process
before such instrumental approaches become pertinent. In doing so, pervasive underlying
'win-win' and 'pro-poor' narratives and associated discourses articulated and legitimised by
constituent vested interests, global and local networks (the biofuels assemblage) and the
power relations between them are scrutinised as part of the 'messy politics' of policymaking.
Through such an investigation, the thesis adds to the understanding of policymaking in South
Africa and seeks to instil the importance of interpretive approaches to analysing
policymaking. Ultimately, decisions around biofuels highlight the importance of meaning
and cognitive frameworks that policymakers bring to the table and the symbolic nature of
policy.
It must, for example be made clear what purpose policy actually fulfils rather than
simply subscribing to social constructions of instrumental success or failure. There is a
lingering if not hegemonic supposition that although South Africa has 'good' policy,
implementation 'fails' due to capacity. While this may be the case, it is inadequate as an
explanation of 'policy failure', where remedial action then becomes more about improving
capacity, which may only serve to reify the abstract disjuncture between policy and practice.
Rather an attempt should be made to 'problematise' what makes policy either 'good' or 'bad'
but more so unpack the taken for granted in policymaking and how policy itself is part of
wider sense making processes whilst also fulfilling symbolic roles beyond the merely
instrumental.
Given an inescapable reality in which politics and knowledge share a dialectic
relationship in policymaking, we should rethink the veracity and technocratic assumptions of
evidence-based policymaking and the value of 'knowledge' in policymaking processes over
and above the way policymakers frame and interpret issues themselves. Considering
'evidence' to be a deus ex machina or panacea, as it is in New Public Management proposals,
may very well be short sighted. Neglecting the interpretive and political aspects of
policymaking, especially within the technical realms of renewable energy in general and
biofuels in particular is equally myopic.
Deconstructing the nature of the policymaking process around biofuels has wider
implications or findings for the South African context. One can see, for example, the
perseverance but slight reconfiguration of the Minerals-Energy Complex (MEC) and a largescale
technological fetish that continues to control the vision and direction of renewable
energy transitions (and policies thereof) in the country. Corporate networks are, however,
only part of the picture and decisions and decision makers involved in the process extend
beyond an 'MEC elite', but increasingly include ANC political gatekeepers who inscribe their
own ideologies and meanings into policy. These are especially acute in the form of narratives
surrounding decisions made, such as the broad-brush exclusion of maize in the face of an
emotive and racially politicised food-versus-fuel storyline. |
Subject(s)
biofuels strategy; South Africa; policymaking |
Language
en |
Publisher
The University of Edinburgh |
Relation
Drimie, S. & Ruysenaar, S., 2010. The Integrated Food Security Strategy of South Africa: An Institutional Analysis. Agrekon, 49(3), pp.316'337.; Pereira, L.M. & Ruysenaar, S., 2012. Moving from traditional government to new adaptive governance: the changing face of food security responses in South Africa. Food Security, 4(1), pp.41'58.; Pradhan, S. & Ruysenaar, S., 2014. Burning Desires- Untangling and Interpreting 'Pro-Poor' Biofuel Policy Processes in India and South Africa. Environment and Planning A, 46(2), pp.299'317.; Ruysenaar, S., 2011. CURES Southern Africa Bioenergy Capacity Building Workshop Summary Report, Johannesburg: CURES.; Ruysenaar, S., 2012. Reconsidering the 'Letsema Principle' and the Role of Community Gardens in Food Security: Evidence from Gauteng, South Africa. Urban Forum, 24(2), pp.219'249.; Ruysenaar, S., 2011. Rethinking the Food-versus-Fuel Debate: An Appraisal of International Perspectives and Implications for the South African Industrial Biofuels Strategy. Environment and Society: Advances in Research, 2(1), pp.124'148.; Ruysenaar, S., 2010. Systems Analyses and Recommendations for the Homestead Food Security and Community Gardens Programmes of the Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (with Reference to wider Implications for the Integrated Food Security Strategy), Johannesburg. |
Type of publication
Thesis or Dissertation; Doctoral; PhD Doctor of Philosophy |
Format
application/pdf |
Repository
Edinburgh - University of Edinburgh
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Added to C-A: 2023-09-04;09:11:39 |
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