TY - JOUR
T1 - Public deliberation about salmon restoration impacts
T2 - Differences in the input of citizens in different community roles
AU - Harris, Charles C.
AU - Becker, Dennis R.
AU - Nielsen, Erik A.
AU - Mclaughlin, William J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2014 Imperial College Press.
PY - 2014/12/12
Y1 - 2014/12/12
N2 - We conducted a deliberative participatory process for social impact assessment (SIA), where interactive, community-based forums (ICFs) gathered public input about community impacts of alternatives for salmon recovery in the Inland Northwest of the United States. After residents were provided information about alternatives and engaged in facilitated discussions, we elicited their understandings of community conditions and judgments of socio-economic impacts. The present analysis focuses on the proposition that citizens engaged in the ICF process who represented diverse roles, based on community domains such as business, health-care, and education, would significantly differ in their judgments about those socio-economic impacts. We collected data on 705 community residents in forums conducted in 27 communities across the Inland Northwest. Results affirm that differences in roles and associated lifestyles, ideologies, and political viewpoints were related to differences in judgments of community conditions and contentiousness of planning alternatives. Implications for the ICF process and its effectiveness for SIA, as well as for other kinds of participatory processes, are discussed.
AB - We conducted a deliberative participatory process for social impact assessment (SIA), where interactive, community-based forums (ICFs) gathered public input about community impacts of alternatives for salmon recovery in the Inland Northwest of the United States. After residents were provided information about alternatives and engaged in facilitated discussions, we elicited their understandings of community conditions and judgments of socio-economic impacts. The present analysis focuses on the proposition that citizens engaged in the ICF process who represented diverse roles, based on community domains such as business, health-care, and education, would significantly differ in their judgments about those socio-economic impacts. We collected data on 705 community residents in forums conducted in 27 communities across the Inland Northwest. Results affirm that differences in roles and associated lifestyles, ideologies, and political viewpoints were related to differences in judgments of community conditions and contentiousness of planning alternatives. Implications for the ICF process and its effectiveness for SIA, as well as for other kinds of participatory processes, are discussed.
KW - Public involvement
KW - collaborative decisionmaking
KW - social impact assessment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84929224341&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.1142/S1464333214500331
DO - 10.1142/S1464333214500331
M3 - Review article
SN - 1464-3332
VL - 16
JO - Journal of Environmental Assessment Policy and Management
JF - Journal of Environmental Assessment Policy and Management
IS - 4
M1 - 1450033
ER -