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Evolution or revolution: Where next for impact assessment?
journal contribution
posted on 2019-07-11, 00:00 authored by Z Banhalmi-Zakar, C Gronow, L Wilkinson, B Jenkins, J Pope, G Squires, K Witt, Galina WilliamsGalina Williams, J WomersleyImpact assessment (IA) has become one of the most prevalent environmental policy instruments today. Its introduction under the National Environmental Policy Act (US) in 1969 was revolutionary. Perhaps it is not surprising, then, that such a widely used tool has received its share of criticism, including that it fails to meet some of its fundamental goals. Over the last fifty years, IA has broadened in scope and application and embraced new techniques. It has followed evolved, but has not changed fundamentally. We believe that IA must continue to change to meet the societal and environmental challenges of the 21 st century. But will it be enough for IA to progress through incremental change (evolution), or is a complete overhaul of impact assessment (revolution) needed? We provide some ideas as to what ‘evolution’ and ‘revolution’ may look like, but rather then offering a definitive way forward now, we invite stakeholders to present their thoughts and suggestions at the IAIA19 Annual Conference in Brisbane, which carries the same theme as the title of this article. © 2018, IAIA.
History
Volume
36Issue
6Start Page
506End Page
515Number of Pages
10ISSN
1461-5517Publisher
Taylor & Francis, ukPublisher DOI
Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
External Author Affiliations
Womersley Environmental Management, QLD; University of Queensland; GHD, Brisbane; North-West University, RSA; Integral Sustainability, Perth; University of Adelaide; Edith Cowan University; James Cook University; University of Bristol, UK; JBS&G, Melbourne;Era Eligible
- Yes
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Impact Assessment and Project AppraisalUsage metrics
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