TY - JOUR
T1 - Distilling best practice principles for public participation in impact assessment follow-up
AU - Morrison-Saunders, Angus
AU - Arts, Jos
AU - Pope, Jenny
AU - Bond, Alan
AU - Retief, Francois
N1 - Funding Information:
The input of survey respondents is gratefully acknowledged.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 IAIA.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Building upon principles for public engagement and for impact assessment (IA) follow-up, this paper distils best practice principles specific to public participation in IA follow-up. Literature review, followed by a simple survey distributed to IA follow-up and/or public engagement practitioners, helped identify key principles and related published sources. Twelve principles for public participation in IA follow-up are presented, which relate to (1) mandatory public reporting, (2) ease of access to published material, (3) full transparency, (4) clarity about the IA follow-up process, (5) input to decision-making, (6) continuous access to IA follow-up activities and feedback, (7) independent verification, (8) two-way communication, (9) partnerships, (10) Indigenous inclusion, (11) participatory monitoring, and (12) involvement in adaptive management. They form a ladder of public engagement; the initial principles pertain mainly to information provision, with increasing levels of participation and legitimacy inherent in the latter principles. The principles are intended to provide a foundation for practitioners and community members involved in IA follow-up to enhance practice at all stages of the development life cycle, helping to achieve sustainable development.
AB - Building upon principles for public engagement and for impact assessment (IA) follow-up, this paper distils best practice principles specific to public participation in IA follow-up. Literature review, followed by a simple survey distributed to IA follow-up and/or public engagement practitioners, helped identify key principles and related published sources. Twelve principles for public participation in IA follow-up are presented, which relate to (1) mandatory public reporting, (2) ease of access to published material, (3) full transparency, (4) clarity about the IA follow-up process, (5) input to decision-making, (6) continuous access to IA follow-up activities and feedback, (7) independent verification, (8) two-way communication, (9) partnerships, (10) Indigenous inclusion, (11) participatory monitoring, and (12) involvement in adaptive management. They form a ladder of public engagement; the initial principles pertain mainly to information provision, with increasing levels of participation and legitimacy inherent in the latter principles. The principles are intended to provide a foundation for practitioners and community members involved in IA follow-up to enhance practice at all stages of the development life cycle, helping to achieve sustainable development.
KW - adaptive management
KW - auditing
KW - evaluation
KW - governance
KW - impact assessment follow-up
KW - monitoring
KW - Public participation
KW - stakeholder engagement
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85138315900
U2 - 10.1080/14615517.2022.2119527
DO - 10.1080/14615517.2022.2119527
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85138315900
SN - 1461-5517
VL - 41
SP - 48
EP - 58
JO - Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal
JF - Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal
IS - 1
ER -