Challenges to the Aarhus Convention: Public Participation in the Energy Planning Process in the United Kingdom

This article examines the tension between the democratic right of public participation on specific environmental issues, guaranteed by European Law, and the degree to which it is being challenged in the UK as a consequence of recent approaches to energy infrastructure planning. Recent trends in UK g...

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Main Authors: Raphael Heffron, Paul Haynes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UACES 2014-05-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary European Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/561/462
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spelling doaj-091d6a0981ac4abe81d000fa341686162020-11-24T22:51:35ZengUACESJournal of Contemporary European Research1815-347X2014-05-01102236247Challenges to the Aarhus Convention: Public Participation in the Energy Planning Process in the United KingdomRaphael Heffron0Paul Haynes1University of StirlingRoyal Holloway, University of LondonThis article examines the tension between the democratic right of public participation on specific environmental issues, guaranteed by European Law, and the degree to which it is being challenged in the UK as a consequence of recent approaches to energy infrastructure planning. Recent trends in UK government policy frameworks seem both to threaten effective public participation and challenge EU planning strategy, in particular those outlined in the Aarhus convention. The research outlined in this study involves an assessment of the changing context of planning and energy policy, in addition to recent changes in legislation formulation in the UK. The research findings, derived from an extensive interview process of elite stakeholders engaged in policy and legislation formulation in the UK and the EU provide a new categorisation system of stakeholders in energy policy that can be utilised in future research. The article concludes with a second order analysis of the interviewee data and provides solutions to increase public participation in the planning of energy infrastructure that emerge from the different perspectives.http://www.jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/561/462Public participationAarhus Conventionplanning policy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Raphael Heffron
Paul Haynes
spellingShingle Raphael Heffron
Paul Haynes
Challenges to the Aarhus Convention: Public Participation in the Energy Planning Process in the United Kingdom
Journal of Contemporary European Research
Public participation
Aarhus Convention
planning policy
author_facet Raphael Heffron
Paul Haynes
author_sort Raphael Heffron
title Challenges to the Aarhus Convention: Public Participation in the Energy Planning Process in the United Kingdom
title_short Challenges to the Aarhus Convention: Public Participation in the Energy Planning Process in the United Kingdom
title_full Challenges to the Aarhus Convention: Public Participation in the Energy Planning Process in the United Kingdom
title_fullStr Challenges to the Aarhus Convention: Public Participation in the Energy Planning Process in the United Kingdom
title_full_unstemmed Challenges to the Aarhus Convention: Public Participation in the Energy Planning Process in the United Kingdom
title_sort challenges to the aarhus convention: public participation in the energy planning process in the united kingdom
publisher UACES
series Journal of Contemporary European Research
issn 1815-347X
publishDate 2014-05-01
description This article examines the tension between the democratic right of public participation on specific environmental issues, guaranteed by European Law, and the degree to which it is being challenged in the UK as a consequence of recent approaches to energy infrastructure planning. Recent trends in UK government policy frameworks seem both to threaten effective public participation and challenge EU planning strategy, in particular those outlined in the Aarhus convention. The research outlined in this study involves an assessment of the changing context of planning and energy policy, in addition to recent changes in legislation formulation in the UK. The research findings, derived from an extensive interview process of elite stakeholders engaged in policy and legislation formulation in the UK and the EU provide a new categorisation system of stakeholders in energy policy that can be utilised in future research. The article concludes with a second order analysis of the interviewee data and provides solutions to increase public participation in the planning of energy infrastructure that emerge from the different perspectives.
topic Public participation
Aarhus Convention
planning policy
url http://www.jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/561/462
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AT paulhaynes challengestotheaarhusconventionpublicparticipationintheenergyplanningprocessintheunitedkingdom
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