Knowledge, Power, and Participation in Environmental Policy AnalysisRoutledge, 2018. gada 16. janv. - 500 lappuses This volume probes practical dilemmas and competing re- search perspectives in environmental policy analysis. Scholars working in different fields, research traditions, societies, and policy domains offer significant insights into the processes and consequences of environmental policy making. Part 1, "Coping with Boundaries," describes present-day conflict between experts and greater public participation in environmental policy. It shows that the institutionalization of increasingly complex environmental problems has led to a conflict between technocracy and democracy. Part 2, "The Transnational Challenge," examines modes of cooperation between grassroots movements, scientists, and regional authorities in the United States and Canada. These and other modes of cooperation laid the foundations for the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement, increased the effectiveness of air pollution treaties, and increased climate change. Part 3, "Bio-Hazards: Policies and Paralysis," deals with environmental prob-lems closest to the everyday concerns of the public at large because they have immediate implications for food safety and other values. Part 4, "The Citizens' Perspective," focuses on citizen vis-a-vis environmental policy, noting that in order to make policies work citizens must be willing and able to participate in policy-making and cooperate in implementing environmental choices. Part 5, "Confronting Ordinary and Expert Knowledge," explores opportunities and constraints affecting public participation in evaluation of science. Part 6, "Developments in Research Programming," addresses such questions as whether scientists still have opportunities to do the research they want without being interrupted or disturbed by policy makers and other stakeholders. Part 7, "Policy Sciences' Aspirations," explores different avenues for improving environmental policy. Volume twelve in the PSRA series should inspire further investigations of the relations among knowledge, power, and participation in environmental policy. It will be of timely interest to environmentalists, policy-makers, scholars, and the general public. |
Saturs
Citizen Inquiry | |
The Case | |
Integrating Knowledge Power | |
Toward a Best Practice of Constructing Serviceable | |
Its Past | |
The Role | |
Climate Change | |
Public Perceptions of Environmental Risks | |
Integrated Assessment Modeling and the Participatory | |
A Case Study | |
The Case of Social | |
Aggregation MachinesA Political Science of Science | |
Using the Method of Context Validation to Mitigate Type | |
Knowledge Use and Political Choice in Dutch | |
An Exploration | |
A Case Study | |
The Great BSE Scare of 1996 | |
Description and Explanation of the Greening of | |
About the Contributors | |
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Knowledge, Power, and Participation in Environmental Policy Analysis Rob Hoppe,William N. Dunn Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2001 |
Knowledge, Power, and Participation in Environmental Policy Analysis Matthijs Hisschemöller,Rob Hoppe,William N. Dunn Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 2001 |
Knowledge Power and Participation in Environmental Policy Analysis Rob Hoppe Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 2018 |