Cover image for Taking stock of environmental assessment : Law, policy and practice
Title:
Taking stock of environmental assessment : Law, policy and practice
Publication Information:
London : Routledge, 2007
Physical Description:
xix, 302 p. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9781844721016

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30000010221701 K3585 T35 2007 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

This edited collection analyzes the appropriate balance between conservation and development and the place for participation and popular protest in environmental assessment. Examining the relationship between law, environmental governance and the regulation of decision-making, this volume takes a reflective and contextual approach, using wide range of theories, to explore the key features of modern environmental assessment.

This collection of work from experts in the area in the US and Europe provides a detailed treatment of key issues in environmental assessment, encouraging an appreciation of where environmental assessment has come from and how it could develop in the future. A 'stocktaking' exercise, this volume encompasses a broad range of concerns, timescales and legal and policy contexts.

Individual chapters include discussions on:

the development of EIA in the United States and Europe the interrelation of environmental assessment with other regulatory regimes (water protection, environmental justice initiatives, the European spatial strategy) the prospects for the digitalization of the environmental assessment process the development and use of environmental impact assessment by the European Commission, the UN/ECE and NGOs.

Looking at the roots and current state of environmental assessment in the US and Europe and giving the reader a good sense of the political, scientific and technological settings in which environmental assessment has developed, this book critically examines the dilemmas the law has found itself in since the regulation of environmental assessment.


Author Notes

Dr Jane Holder, Reader in Environmental Law, Faculty of Laws, University College London, is a member of the Centre for Law and the Environment, UCL and co-editor of Current Legal Problems.

Donald McGillivray, Senior Lecturer, Kent Law School, University of Kent, lectures in environmental law and is case analysis editor for the Journal of Environmental Law.


Table of Contents

Donald McGillivray and Jane HolderCarys Jones and Stephen Jay and Paul Slinn and Christopher WoodBradley C KarkkainenJonathan B WienerLudwig KramerWilliam HowarthAine RyallDaniel A FarberJane Holder
List of contributors and biographical detailsp. vii
Prefacep. xi
1 Taking stockp. 1
2 Environmental assessment: dominant or dormant?p. 17
3 NEPA and the curious evolution of environmental impact assessment in the United Statesp. 45
4 Better Regulation in Europep. 65
5 The development of environmental assessments at the level of the European Unionp. 131
6 Substance and procedure under the strategic environmental assessment directive and the water framework directivep. 149
7 Access to justice and the EIA directive: the implications of the Aarhus Conventionp. 191
8 Bringing environmental assessment into the digital agep. 219
9 The prospects for ecological impact assessmentp. 259
Indexp. 285