Restorative Nodes of Governance in the Anthropocene: Iran's Kashaf River

26 Pages Posted: 22 Aug 2019 Last revised: 8 Dec 2019

See all articles by Honeye Hojabrosadati

Honeye Hojabrosadati

Islamic Azad University (IAU)

Miranda Forsyth

School of Regulation & Global Governance (RegNet)

John Braithwaite

School of Regulation & Global Governance (RegNet)

Date Written: August 20, 2019

Abstract

Environmental collapse along the Kashaf River in Iran is about desertification, climate change and heavy metal pollution. The river concentrates a nest of intertwined crises about urban squatters, drugs, crime, public health, marginalization, state and city planning and threats to the legitimacy and survival of the state itself. Five Clifford Shearing ideas are woven into the theoretical fabric of the article: nodal governance; regulatory culture as a storybook (rather than a rulebook); justice as a better future; and AMP – networked discovery of Awareness, Motivation and Pathways for transformation; and a green ethic of care to guide transformation. These microdynamics arise in a Kashaf River imaginary that different societies might learn from. They involve nodes of local governance organized by front-line workers who restoried intertwined problems with an ethic of care. The challenge is that restorative micro-strategies proved promising when steering powerless actors, but frayed when faced with factory owners. More aggressive strategies of policycentric governance are needed for responsive escalation to confront privilege. Yet they too may be more creatively escalated nodes of conversational regulation.

Suggested Citation

Hojabrosadati, Honeye and Forsyth, Miranda and Braithwaite, John, Restorative Nodes of Governance in the Anthropocene: Iran's Kashaf River (August 20, 2019). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3439910 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3439910

Honeye Hojabrosadati

Islamic Azad University (IAU) ( email )

Hamedan, Iran
Iran
Tehran, Isfahan 461-15655
Iran

Miranda Forsyth

School of Regulation & Global Governance (RegNet) ( email )

Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 0200
Australia

John Braithwaite (Contact Author)

School of Regulation & Global Governance (RegNet) ( email )

Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 0200
Australia

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