Author
Listed:
- Zoha Shawoo
- Adis Dzebo
- Mikkel Funder
- Kendra Dupuy
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to investigate how political and technical factors influence climate finance coordination in different country contexts. Emerging scholarly and policy literature calls for the improved coordination of climate finance to enhance the effectiveness of multiple sources of funding for adaptation and mitigation purposes, with country ownership over coordination emerging as a potential approach. However, few studies have examined how climate finance coordination unfolds at the national level in developing countries. This paper presents findings from a comparative assessment of climate finance coordination practices in Kenya and Zambia, drawing on semi-structured interviews, policy documents, and relevant literature. Specifically, the paper investigates how political and technical forces shape climate finance coordination in contexts with varying country ownership over the coordination process. We find that political factors relating to power dynamics, framings of climate finance, and vested interests play a strong role in shaping how actors interact, hampering coordination efforts within the climate finance landscape in both countries. This adds a new dimension to calls for greater country ownership, which we suggest needs to be paired with a critical examination of political struggles and contestation.Key policy insightsUnderlying political factors relating to conflicting vested interests, different framings and discourses, political will, and power dynamics play a substantive and overarching role in shaping climate finance coordination in Kenya and Zambia.These political factors limit the extent to which greater country ownership translates to better or more effective coordination of climate finance; as such, ownership needs to be examined in the context of political struggles and contestation.Instead of just aiming to improve coordination through more formalized coordination structures, capacity building and reduced fragmentation, countries also need to be more transparent and acknowledge the deep-seated interests within the climate finance landscape, to make visible the winners and losers of various coordination mechanisms and structures.
Suggested Citation
Zoha Shawoo & Adis Dzebo & Mikkel Funder & Kendra Dupuy, 2022.
"Country ownership in climate finance coordination: a comparative assessment of Kenya and Zambia,"
Climate Policy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 22(9-10), pages 1266-1280, November.
Handle:
RePEc:taf:tcpoxx:v:22:y:2022:i:9-10:p:1266-1280
DOI: 10.1080/14693062.2022.2098227
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