Linked e-resources
Details
Table of Contents
Intro
Acknowledgements
Contents
1 Introduction: Environmental Participation
A Science Studies Perspective on Environmental Participation
Why Environmental Participation Is Unique
Origin Stories
Participation in Environmental Science, Decision Making or Expertise?
Public Participation in Environmental Science-Co-production, Dialogue or Education?
Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making-Instrumental, Substantive or Normative?
Uninvited or Invited Participation in Expert-Led Environmental Management?
Who Participates?
What Do Participants Do?
Environmental Participation in Three Dimensions
References
2 Public Participation in Environmental Science
Environmental Science and Its Publics
Co-production: Environmental Competency Groups Doing Science Differently
Environmental Participation Changing Flood Risk Management
Complementary Co-production in Uckfield and Marlborough
Lessons on Co-production
Scientists Deliberating with Stakeholders
Deliberating with Stakeholders in a National Research Programme
Stakeholder Deliberation in an International Project
Citizen Science-Mass Participation
Spatially Distributed Mediated Citizen Science
Local Citizen Science Monitoring
Concluding Reflections on Environmental Participation in Science
References
3 Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making
Introduction
Environmental Decision Making and Participating Publics
Rationales of Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making
Public Participation in Local Decision Making: The West Cumbria MRWS Partnership
Catchment Partnerships-Continuing Environmental Participation
Three Rationales in Practice
'Technologies of Elicitation' in Environmental Decision Making
References
4 Public Participation That Reconfigures Expertise
Expertise Bridging the Gap
Uninvited Environmental Participation
Enabling Publics to Accept Invitations to Participate
Volunteers Modelling Water Quality in Salmons Brook
Affected Residents Modelling Flooding in Otley
Rethinking Environmental Participation in Expertise
References
5 Conclusion: Thinking Through Environmental Participation in Practice
Summing up the Examples of Environmental Participation Practices
Learning from Public Participation in Environmental Science
Considering Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making
Complex Entanglements of Environmental Participation and Expertise
Participating Publics
Professionalisation of Environmental Participation
Resistance to Environmental Participation
The Place of Environmental Participation
Epilogue
References
Index
Acknowledgements
Contents
1 Introduction: Environmental Participation
A Science Studies Perspective on Environmental Participation
Why Environmental Participation Is Unique
Origin Stories
Participation in Environmental Science, Decision Making or Expertise?
Public Participation in Environmental Science-Co-production, Dialogue or Education?
Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making-Instrumental, Substantive or Normative?
Uninvited or Invited Participation in Expert-Led Environmental Management?
Who Participates?
What Do Participants Do?
Environmental Participation in Three Dimensions
References
2 Public Participation in Environmental Science
Environmental Science and Its Publics
Co-production: Environmental Competency Groups Doing Science Differently
Environmental Participation Changing Flood Risk Management
Complementary Co-production in Uckfield and Marlborough
Lessons on Co-production
Scientists Deliberating with Stakeholders
Deliberating with Stakeholders in a National Research Programme
Stakeholder Deliberation in an International Project
Citizen Science-Mass Participation
Spatially Distributed Mediated Citizen Science
Local Citizen Science Monitoring
Concluding Reflections on Environmental Participation in Science
References
3 Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making
Introduction
Environmental Decision Making and Participating Publics
Rationales of Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making
Public Participation in Local Decision Making: The West Cumbria MRWS Partnership
Catchment Partnerships-Continuing Environmental Participation
Three Rationales in Practice
'Technologies of Elicitation' in Environmental Decision Making
References
4 Public Participation That Reconfigures Expertise
Expertise Bridging the Gap
Uninvited Environmental Participation
Enabling Publics to Accept Invitations to Participate
Volunteers Modelling Water Quality in Salmons Brook
Affected Residents Modelling Flooding in Otley
Rethinking Environmental Participation in Expertise
References
5 Conclusion: Thinking Through Environmental Participation in Practice
Summing up the Examples of Environmental Participation Practices
Learning from Public Participation in Environmental Science
Considering Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making
Complex Entanglements of Environmental Participation and Expertise
Participating Publics
Professionalisation of Environmental Participation
Resistance to Environmental Participation
The Place of Environmental Participation
Epilogue
References
Index