| Literature DB >> 21679456 |
Mikko V Pohjola1, Jouni T Tuomisto.
Abstract
Issues of environment and environmental health involve multiple interests regarding e.g. political, societal, economical, and public concerns represented by different kinds of organizations and individuals. Not surprisingly, stakeholder and public participation has become a major issue in environmental and environmental health policy and assessment. The need for participation has been discussed and reasoned by many, including environmental legislators around the world. In principle, participation is generally considered as desirable and the focus of most scholars and practitioners is on carrying out participation, and making participation more effective. In practice also doubts regarding the effectiveness and importance of participation exist among policy makers, assessors, and public, leading even to undermining participatory practices in policy making and assessment.There are many possible purposes for participation, and different possible models of interaction between assessment and policy. A solid conceptual understanding of the interrelations between participation, assessment, and policy making is necessary in order to design and implement effective participatory practices. In this paper we ask, do current common conceptions of assessment, policy making and participation provide a sufficient framework for achieving effective participation? This question is addresses by reviewing the range of approaches to participation in assessment and policy making upon issues of environment and environmental health and some related insights from recent research projects, INTARESE and BENERIS.Openness, considered e.g. in terms of a) scope of participation, b) access to information, c) scope of contribution, d) timing of openness, and e) impact of contribution, provides a new perspective to the relationships between participation, assessment and policy making. Participation, assessment, and policy making form an inherently intertwined complex with interrelated objectives and outcomes. Based on experiences from implementing openness, we suggest complete openness as the new default, deviation from which should be explicitly argued, in assessment and policy making upon issues of environment and environmental health. Openness does not undermine the existing participatory models and techniques, but provides conceptual means for their more effective application, and opens up avenues for developing new kinds of effective participatory practices that aim for societal development through collaborative creation of knowledge.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21679456 PMCID: PMC3155968 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-10-58
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Figure 1Relationships between participation, assessment, policy making, and their outcomes. Arrows depict alternative routes for potential influence from participation to outcomes.
Figure 2Open assessment as a collaborative social knowledge process. The strawmen depict the members of a society. The paper sheet depicts an assessment in Opasnet (Q = question, R = rationale, A = answer). Yellow arrows depict observation (here of an undesired event, a toxic liquid spill). Green arrows depict information flow (from members of society to an assessment in Opasnet, from the assessment to members of society, or directly between members of society). Blue arrow depicts knowledge-based action (correctly taking care of the spill).
Perspectives to openness in "external participation" for five example assessment approaches considered according to the dimensions of openness framework.
| Dimension/Approach | Scope of participation | Access to information | Timing of openness | Scope of contribution | Impact of contribution |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Open assessment | Everyone, e.g. decision makers, NGO's, citizens, external experts, allowed to participate. User participation particularly important. | All information should be made available to all participants. | Continuous. | All aspects of the issue can be addressed by everyone. | Based on relevance and reasoning, not source. All relevant contributions must be taken into account. Conclusions from collaboration intended to turn into action through collective knowledge creation among participants in a shared web-workspace. |
| IEHIA | Specified users (e.g. policy makers), and stakeholders (preferably by proxy) invited to participate. | ? | User and stakeholder participation during issue framing, design and appraisal phases (not during execution phase). | Users and stakeholders can participate in scoping and design of assessment and interpretation of results. | Participant views influence the construction of the assessment framework. Appraisal phase discourse regarding the assessment results, their implications for action, and their linkage to the goals defined in issue framing assumed to ensure that those involved accept the outcomes. |
| YVA | Public, liaison authority (e.g. regional environmental center), other authorities. | Assessment plan and assessment report provided to the public by the project developer. Liaison authority also has access to information regarding e.g. other plans, projects and operations relevant to the project. | Participation in two phases. Public hearing periods, possible authority statements regarding both assessment plan and assessment report. Liaison authority gives its statements after the public and the other authority statements. | Any public representative can give any statements, and the liaison authority may ask specific statements from other authorities in both phases. Liaison authority gives an overall statement on both the assessment plan and the assessment report. | Public statements filed along with the liaison authority statements. Ultimately up to the project developers and the decision makers to decide if and how public statements are taken account of in project design or decision making. The liaison authority, also taking account of public and other authority statements, can also demand e.g. certain issues to be considered in the assessment or other additional information to be provided by the project developer. |
| Red Book | N/A (Assessment for nominated scientific experts only). | N/A | N/A | N/A | Assessment results provided for decision makers and intended to be taken into account, alongside options evaluation, in decision making and action by federal agencies. |
| Silver Book | Decision-makers, technical specialists, and other stakeholders. | Formal provisions for internal and external stakeholders at all stages. | At all stages: problem formulation and scoping, planning and conduct of risk assessment, and risk management. | Problem formulation and scoping, confirmation of utility of risk assessment, and risk management. | Stakeholders as active participants. However, participation should in no way compromise the technical assessment of risk, which is carried out under its own standards and guidelines. |
? = could not be determined based on the information source, N/A = not applicable.