Anspruch und Wirklichkeit: befördert Partizipation umweltpolitisch "gute" Entscheidungen?
Keywords
ÖkologiePolitikwissenschaft
Ecology
Political science
Ökologie und Umwelt
politische Willensbildung, politische Soziologie, politische Kultur
Ecology, Environment
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Partizipation
Umweltpolitik
Zivilgesellschaft
Nachhaltigkeit
Öffentlichkeit
politische Kommunikation
Multi-Level-Governance
Entscheidungsprozess
Umweltschutz
USA
Nordamerika
Westeuropa
participation
environmental policy
civil society
sustainability
the public
political communication
multi-level-governance
decision making process
environmental protection
United States of America
North America
Western Europe
Full record
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http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/40679Abstract
"Zu den wünschenswerten Ergebnissen von Partizipation gibt es eine reichhaltige Fülle an theoretischer Literatur.In Zeiten hoher umweltpolitischer Komplexität und 'Multi-level governance' erhofft man sich von zivilgesellschaftlicher Beteiligung an Entscheidungsprozessen eine Verbesserung der Ergebnisse und eine zügige und breit akzeptierte Umsetzung der beschlossenen Umweltmaßnahmen. Es klafft aber eine große Forschungslücke zwischen theoretischem Wunsch und empirischer Wirklichkeit,da die unzähligen, bislang insbesondere in Nordamerika durchgeführten partizipativen Verfahren noch nicht systematisch und vergleichend auf ihre konkreten umweltpolitischen Effekte untersucht wurden. Eine Meta-Analyse von Fallstudien soll dazu beitragen, diese Lücke zu schließen." (Autorenreferat)"Current political trends and scholarly research increasingly promote collaborative and participatory governance in multi-level systems as a pathway to more sustainable and effective environmental policy. Such decision making, so the hopes, could yield better results and a swifter, more broadly accepted implementation of measures. Nonetheless, the research gap between desire and reality is large. Countless case studies on (participatory) environmental governance have been published, but never systematically reviewed. A meta-analysis of 47 case studies from North America and Western Europe is designed to close this gap and shed light on the hopes placed on participation." (author's abstract)
Date
2013-07-18Type
SammelwerksbeitragIdentifier
oai:gesis.izsoz.de:document/40679978-3-86581-210-0
http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/40679
urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-406795
Copyright/License
Deposit Licence - Keine Weiterverbreitung, keine BearbeitungRelated items
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