Private Actors in Multi-level Governance: GLOBALG.A.P Standard-setting for Agricultural and Food Products

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

McNaughton, Anne
Lockie, Stewart

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ANU Press

Abstract

One aspect of governance and regulation that tends to be persistently overlooked is the role of private actors, particularly as standard-setting agencies. Historically, industry bodies have traditionally set standards in specific fields (Schepel 2005: 145). In recent years, however, private standards have taken on significance as regulatory tools. While much has been written about the implications of private standards and standardisation (e.g. Marx et al. 2012; Casey 2009; Henson and Humphrey 2009; Havinga 2006), very little has been written about how standards become such regulatory tools. Unpacking the ‘black box’ of standardisation to see how it works is a neglected field of inquiry. This chapter makes a contribution to redressing this situation. We do so by applying the work of regulatory scholars, Julia Black, John Braithwaite and Ian Ayres, to a transnational, private standard-setting organisation, GLOBALG.A.P. We use Black’s (2001) work on ‘decentred regulation’ and Ayres and Braithwaite’s (1992) work on ‘responsive regulation’ to account for private actors as regulators in a multi-level governance structure.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Book Title

Multi-level Governance: Conceptual Challenges and Case Studies from Australia

Entity type

Access Statement

Open access via publisher website

License Rights

Restricted until