• Public Involvement in Environmental Assessment: The Case of the Nonparticipant

    Diduck & Sinclair

Description

  • ​Public involvement is recognized by legislators, practitioners, academics, nongovernment organizations and, most importantly, affected communities, as a fundamental component of environmental assessment (EA) processes. Experience with public involvement in EA has proven, however, that despite good intentions, there are formidable barriers to participation. This paper examines this issue, largely through a case study of a new Can$120 million hog processing facility in Brandon, Canada

Citation

  • Reference Type: Journal Article Author: Diduck, Alan Author: Sinclair, A. John Primary Title: Public Involvement in Environmental Assessment: The Case of the Nonparticipant Journal Name: Environmental Management Cover Date: 2002-04-21 Publisher: Springer New York Issn: 0364-152X Subject: Earth and Environmental Science Start Page: 578 End Page: 588 Volume: 29 Issue: 4 Url: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-001-0028-9 Doi: 10.1007/s00267-001-0028-9

Section

  • General

Free/Paid

  • Paid
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