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Communication and Stakeholder Involvement in Environmental Remediation Projects

Abstract

The way in which members of the public perceive a contamination situation and an approach to the remediation of contaminated land will influence the decision making process in a variety of ways. Through communication between experts, decision makers and members of stakeholder communities, participatory processes and negotiation between different interest groups can sometimes be used effectively as mechanisms for improving the overall decision making process. The intention is to ensure a technically sound and socially acceptable decision that meets norms of adequacy or satisfactory performance in relation to a whole range of different concerns. Good communication strategies will encourage cooperation and understanding between different interested parties in remediation projects. Involvement of affected or interested persons can prevent fear driven reactions, which potentially damage public response and create undue expectations or unnecessary anxiety. For all environmental remediation (ER) cases, there is a risk that the process will fail if it does not respect social, environmental, political and economic dimensions. This requires open, clear and mutually agreed lines of communication among stakeholders within a well defined legal framework. A general recommendation is to involve them from a very early point in the process. This publication presents ER in plain language in such  More>>
Publication Date:
May 15, 2014
Product Type:
Book
Report Number:
STI/PUB-1629
Resource Relation:
Other Information: 28 refs., 6 tabs.; Related Information: Series: IAEA Nuclear Energy Series; no. NW-T-3.5
Subject:
54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES; DECISION MAKING; DECONTAMINATION; ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION; ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY; GLOBAL ASPECTS; INTEREST GROUPS; LEGAL ASPECTS; NEGOTIATION; PERFORMANCE; RECOMMENDATIONS; REMEDIAL ACTION
OSTI ID:
22244867
Research Organizations:
International Atomic Energy Agency, Division of Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Waste Technology, Vienna (Austria)
Country of Origin:
IAEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ISBN 978-92-0-145210-8; ISSN 1995-7807; TRN: XA14M4522066000
Availability:
Also available on-line: http://www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/Publications/PDF/Pub1629_web.pdf; Enquiries should be addressed to IAEA, Marketing and Sales Unit, Publishing Section, E-mail: sales.publications@iaea.org; Web site: http://www.iaea.org/books
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
59 page(s)
Announcement Date:
Jul 07, 2014

Citation Formats

None. Communication and Stakeholder Involvement in Environmental Remediation Projects. IAEA: N. p., 2014. Web.
None. Communication and Stakeholder Involvement in Environmental Remediation Projects. IAEA.
None. 2014. "Communication and Stakeholder Involvement in Environmental Remediation Projects." IAEA.
@misc{etde_22244867,
title = {Communication and Stakeholder Involvement in Environmental Remediation Projects}
author = {None}
abstractNote = {The way in which members of the public perceive a contamination situation and an approach to the remediation of contaminated land will influence the decision making process in a variety of ways. Through communication between experts, decision makers and members of stakeholder communities, participatory processes and negotiation between different interest groups can sometimes be used effectively as mechanisms for improving the overall decision making process. The intention is to ensure a technically sound and socially acceptable decision that meets norms of adequacy or satisfactory performance in relation to a whole range of different concerns. Good communication strategies will encourage cooperation and understanding between different interested parties in remediation projects. Involvement of affected or interested persons can prevent fear driven reactions, which potentially damage public response and create undue expectations or unnecessary anxiety. For all environmental remediation (ER) cases, there is a risk that the process will fail if it does not respect social, environmental, political and economic dimensions. This requires open, clear and mutually agreed lines of communication among stakeholders within a well defined legal framework. A general recommendation is to involve them from a very early point in the process. This publication presents ER in plain language in such a way that implementers and regulators can communicate the motives and objectives of remediation projects to a variety of stakeholder communities in order to improve mutual understanding and facilitate dialogue between interested parties. ER is considered from two perspectives: technical and non-technical. A section that gives general ideas on the strategies to deal with stakeholder involvement and which discusses different aspects of the communication approaches in ER is then included. It is recognized that social, cultural and political situations are very diverse in different countries in the world, and even in different communities within the same country. The consequence of this is that there is not a single solution, nor a single approach, to implement stakeholder communication and involvement strategies. They will need to be tailored to address the specific situation. (author)}
place = {IAEA}
year = {2014}
month = {May}
}