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Public Policy and Environmental Conflicts
Juliana Birkhoff
Senior Mediator, Resolve
Heidi Burgess
Co-Director, Conflict Research Consortium
University of Colorado
What they are about:
Environmental and public policy conflicts frequently begin over disagreements
about the access to, use and control of public lands and resources, protection
of species, and how to maintain a safe environment. Conflicts can arise if
individuals or groups are not involved in decisions that affect them, or if
resources are distributed inequitably. Individuals and organizations also have
differences about the public policies that address human interactions and uses
of the natural environment.
Environmental and public policy conflicts are also about different values.
Some people might value protecting the environment above all else, while others
may see the need for national energy independence to be more important. Or one
group may want to protect open space, while another group values housing growth
to accommodate a growing population and to provide "affordable
housing." These value differences affect the issues that people pay
attention to, the ways that they understand those issues, and the actions they
take. Since values are often very important and the differences very pronounced,
such conflicts can often become severe and very difficult to manage or resolve.
Environmental and public policy conflicts are also complicated because people
have different beliefs about the relationship between people and the
environment. Some people believe that people are separate from nature, while
others think we are part of it. Similarly, some people believe that natural
resources are important for the benefits they provide for people, while others
see them as important in their own right. These differences contribute to
environmental conflict because they determine how people define the issues and
how they decide to address them.
People also differ in their perceptions about benefits and risks. Some
people, for instance, see the risk of nuclear power as far in excess of any
benefits. Others argue that nuclear power is much safer than riding in a car
and we all do that all the time. These perceptions profoundly affect what people
pay attention to and generate intense emotional interactions.
Why they can be difficult to resolve:
Environmental and public policy conflicts often involve many parties and many
issues. Often the parties are indistinct or amorphoussome may be organized
environmental groups, government agencies, or corporations, while others are
simply concerned individuals who may organize together in one way for awhile,
break apart, and coalesce in a different way. Groups express these grievances
and pursue these disputes in overlapping jurisdictions and fora. While one group
may be negotiating, another may be pursuing a legal option in court.
Furthermore, these conflicts involve a confusing array of local, cultural,
economic, social, legal, and scientific information. Not only is this hard to
collect, it is frequently hard to interpret. Oftentimes critical pieces of
information are simply not knowable: scientists may disagree about likely
impacts of a proposal or past harms that have occurred. Finally, they are likely
to become difficult to resolve because they involve inter-generational benefits
and risks, and problems of resources that belong to all (public lands).
Ways such conflicts are handled:
Typically, public policy and environmental conflicts were handled through
"expert" governmental processesadministrative, judicial, or both.
Scientists and policy makers at government agencies would issue regulations,
which, more often than not would be challenged in court by the affected groups.
This was a very time consuming and costly way to make decisions. As a result,
alternative processes have been developed and are used with increasing
frequency. One is negotiated rulemaking, in which all the interested parties
meet with the administrative agency to jointly develop rules which meet the
needs of all parties, thus avoiding a legal challenge after the rules are
issued. Even more common is collaborative problem solving or consensus building,
a large-scale mediation process in which a facilitator helps all of the interest
groups sit down together and hammer out an agreement to resolve public policy or
environmental disputes to the satisfaction of all parties. Unlike family or
community mediation efforts, which may involve only two parties and be concluded
in one or a few sessions, collaborative problem solving may involve ten or even
50 parties, and take many months or even years to conclude. Thus, this is not
necessarily a faster way to resolve disputes, but it is still often less
expensive, it may well still be faster, and it certainly is more likely to come
up with a solution that is acceptable to all.
Links to Related Articles:
Public Participation
Collaborative Problem Solving and Consensus Building
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