1st Edition

Knowledge, Power, and Participation in Environmental Policy Analysis

By Rob Hoppe Copyright 2001
508 Pages
by Routledge

508 Pages
by Routledge

500 Pages
by Routledge

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... Read more
1: Knowledge, Power, and Participation in Environmental Policy Analysis: An Introduction; 1: Coping with Boundaries; 2: Beyond Technocratic Environmentalism: Citizen Inquiry in Sustainable Development; 3: Coping with Intractable Controversies: The Case for Problem Structuring in Policy Design and Analysis 1; 4: Democratic Expertise: Integrating Knowledge, Power, and Participation; 5: Toward a “Best Practice” of Constructing “Serviceable Truths”; II: The Transnational Challenge; 6: The Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement: Its Past Successes and Uncertain Future; 7: Effectiveness of Air Pollution Treaties: The Role of Knowledge, Power, and Participation; 8: From Arrhenius to the Kyoto Protocol: Climate Change and the Interplay between Science and Policy; III: Bio-Hazards: Policies and Paralysis; 9: Frame-Reflective Policy Analysis in Practice: Co-Evolution of a Policy Regime and an Intractable Controversy in Biotechnology; 10: The Genetically Modified Maize Debacle: A Case Study of Policymakers’ Failure to Deal with Scientific Uncertainty Even After BSE; 11: Civilization and Madness: The Great BSE Scare of 1996 1; IV: The Citizens’ Perspective; 12: Description and Explanation of the Greening of the World: A Methodological and Theoretical Challenge for Survey Methodology (As Illustrated by Research in Brazil and Mexico); 13: Public Perceptions of Environmental Risks and Willingness to Act; V: Confronting Ordinary and Expert Knowledge; 14: Integrated Assessment Modeling and the Participatory Challenge: The Case of Climate Change; 15: Participation and Expert Knowledge: A Case Study Analysis of Scientific Models and Their Publics; VI: Developments in Research Programming; 16: Steering Research Toward Policy: The Case of Social Science and Environmental Change; 17: Aggregation Machines—A Political Science of Science Approach to the Future of the Peer Review System; VII: Policy Sciences’Aspirations; 18: Using the Method of Context Validation to Mitigate Type III Errors in Environmental Policy Analysis; 19: Knowledge Use and Political Choice in Dutch Environmental Policy: A Problem Structuring Perspective on Real Life Experiments in Extended Peer Review; 20: Models of Risks: An Exploration

Biography

Rob Hoppe