Determining Our Environments
The Role of Department of Energy Citizen Advisory Boards
- 190 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Determining Our Environments
The Role of Department of Energy Citizen Advisory Boards
About This Book
Williams examines the efforts of public agencies to better incorporate citizen participation in the administrative process. He focuses on the effort of the Department of Energy to use citizen advisory boards composed of stakeholdersâpersons who stand to gain or lose from policy implementationâin its economic transition, waste management, and environmental restoration programs. The Department's efforts to deal with hazardous and toxic wastes stemming from uranium fuel for the U.S. nuclear weapons program are examined in detail. The case study shows that the stakeholder model was effective: the advisory board was expeditiously organized, reached consensus on critical issues, and accomplished its primary mission. The board's performance was such that the Clinton administration considered it a major example of how federal agencies could be reinvented to produce a government that works better and costs less. Of particular interest to policy makers and researchers involved with US environmental issues and public policy.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1. THE CHANGING REGULATORY PROCESS
- 2. FROM PRODUCTION TO CLEANUP: A HISTORY OF THE FERNALD FACILITY
- 3. IMPLEMENTING THE MODEL: THE CREATION OF THE FERNALD SITE SPECIFIC ADVISORY BOARD
- 4. THE EFFECT OF THE FERNALD SSAB: FROM CONFLICT TO COOPERATION
- 5. THE RESULTS OF A SURVEY INOLVING DOEâS SITE SPECIFIC ADVISORY BOARDS
- 6. THE ETERNAL QUEST FOR PUBLIC PARTICIPATION: ASSESSING THE FERNALD SSAB EXPERIENCE
- Appendices
- Bibliography
- Index