Risk management at the local authority level : improving the technical-institutional-public interface
thesis
posted on 2012-12-11, 15:06authored byJudith Petts
The research contributing to this collation of published work has been directed to the general area
of the technical-institutional-public interface in environmental risk management. Decision-making
at the local authority level in Great Britain has provided the arena of study: specifically land-use
planning for major chemical hazards; waste management planning and the siting of waste treatment
and disposal facilities, and the identification and remediation of contaminated land.
In these areas, management at the local authority level is distinctive in that decisions are directly
publicly accountable; a point of access is provided for public debate about risks and issues of
equity in risk bearing, and decisions require a balancing of social and economic priorities against
risk in the local context. Risk management at the local authority level represents an important
interface where the 'technical' and 'democratic' responses to risk meet, placing significant
demands upon information and communication within decision processes and between different
parties.
The research has examined the interface where the technical and democratic responses meet. It has
characterised the broad scope of the public stance on risk and the subsequent demands upon
information and institutional mechanisms, and has examined the development and application of
decision-making 'tools' (such as environmental assessment and risk assessment) as a means of
enhancing the credibility of decisions. Finally, it has examined practical means by which
stakeholders in risk management decisions can participate in informed decision-making so as to
achieve consensus.
In seeking to understand the dynamics of processes and the interrelationships between experts,
decision-makers and the public at the interface, the research has examined real decisions in the
respective arenas of study. It has also benefited from opportunities to work in different, technical
cultures and from interdisciplinary work. The research has been directed to understanding so as to
suggest practical solutions relevant to the application of decision tools risk communication by
industry and regulators and to decision processes to provide for enhanced public involvement in
risk decision-making.