Openness in participation, assessment, and policy making upon issues of environment and environmental health: a review of literature and recent project results: Difference between revisions

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* Obtain public input into decisions taken elsewhere
* Obtain public input into decisions taken elsewhere
* Share decision making with public
* Share decision making with public
* Alter distribution of power and structures of decision
* Alter distribution of power and structures of decision making
making


These categories roughly correspond to 1) participation
These categories roughly correspond to 1) participation
Line 268: Line 267:


There are multiple kinds of assessment that serve different
There are multiple kinds of assessment that serve different
purposes and address different kinds of questions,
purposes and address different kinds of questions, and thereby provide different contexts for participation.
For example, Pope et al. [30] have differentiated between
a) ex-post, project-based assessments (a typical kind for
environmental impact assessment), b) ex-ante, objectives-
led assessment (a typical kind for strategic environmental
assessment), and c) (a more theoretical)
assessment for sustainability. Briggs [31], on the other
hand has differentiated between i) diagnostic assessment
(does a problem exist, is policy action needed?), ii) prognostic
assessment (implications of potential policy
options, which option to choose?), and iii) summative
assessments (effectiveness of existing policies). Assessment
approaches may also be characterized according to
their contexts of development and application as more
regulatory or academic in their nature [32].
 
Many other classifications exist and new ones could
be made, but what is important from the point of view
of participation in assessments is the possible influence
that is allowed for participation in different assessment
settings. For example, does the assessment structure
allow for rethinking a project at the time the public is
engaged in a project-based environmental assessment
(cf. [29])?, can the stakeholders influence the choice of
policy options to be considered in a prognostic integrated
environmental health impact assessment (cf.
[31])?, or does a down-stream user of a chemical product
have any other role besides providing assessors
with information on specific chemical use contexts in a
REACH (Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and
Restriction of Chemical Substances (EU)) chemical
safety assessment [33]? The framing of an assessment
approach can be a significant constraining factor for
potential effectivness of participation.
 
Quite often stakeholder involvement and public participation
are seen as specific steps or stages in the assessment
process (e.g. [31,34,35], Finnish EIA Act (468/94)),
which may limit the possible influence of participation
to only certain questions topical at that particular stage.
Also according to the study on the state-of-the-art in
benefit-risk analysis conducted in the BEPRARIBEAN
(Best Practices for Risk-Benefit Analysis of Foods) project
[36], the commonly applied, contemporarily well
established approaches to environmental health assessment
treat stakeholder involvement and public participation
rather as an add-on, often brought about by legal
requirements, than as an essential aspect of assessment
or decision making processes [32].
 
===Role of participation in policy making===
 
On the other hand, in many aspects the level of influence
that participation in assessments can have is not
directly in control of the assessors. For example, in the
aforementioned Finnish environmental impact
assessment system, where participation is legally
enforced as a part of the assessment process, the decision
making structures outside the assessment may
induce that certain aspects of assessment results, e.g. in
particular public concerns regarding social impacts, cannot
be given weight in the decision making [28]. Also
the Finnish land use planning system, in which there are
legal requirements for impact assessment including public
participation, treats planning (zoning) and development
as separate processes, which means that the
details of planned development, issues of great public
interest, are outside the scope of assessment and stakeholder
involvement [37]. Both of these examples
describe national implementations of EU directives, and
are thereby somewhat representative of the whole target
area of the corresponding EU legislation.
 
The influence of assessment, participation, as well as all
other potential inputs to policy making is much determined
by the setting in which policy decisions are being
made. As an example from another kind of societal context,
the Chinese authorities may welcome public participation
if it improves the quality of information available
to government decision makers, but may not at all be
willing to give public the power to contribute to and
influence decision making by participating in the formulation
of a proposal, the whole assessment process, the
implementation, and the evaluation of a proposal [4,13].
 
===Indirect participatory influence===
 
If no satisfactory roles are provided for public, or even
expert, input directly in decision making or indirectly
through assessment, alternative options for influencing
policy need to be looked for outside the institutionalized
decision making structures, as pointed out also by
O’Faircheallaigh [13]. In fact, quite many, particularly
the more academic, assessment approaches, although
explicitly aiming to support policy making, do not explicitly
describe their linkages to any particular specific
policy uses [32]. This may be interpreted indicative of
their, more or less implicit, intentions to activate also
other channels than only direct influence to policy making.
An alternative way to advance the societal purposes
of assessments is e.g. to promote social learning among
public officials, market players, and citizens. Also in the
recent evaluation of the existing EIA legislation in Finland
the indirect influence of the information and
knowledge obtained in the participatory assessment,
which does not directly serve the formal sectoral permit
decision processes related to the assessed project, was
interpreted as an important aspect of the Finnish EIA
system by contributing to the general awareness among
the society upon the environmental and health impacts
of on-going developments [38].
 
===Assessment-policy interaction===
 
As has been pointed out above, the interaction between
assessment and policy making can be crucial for effective
participation. Another question then is what influences
the assessment results, potentially influenced by
participation, have in the related decision making processes.
Although often quite credulously assumed by
assessors and assessment scholars that assessments have
significant impacts to the decision making processes
they aim to serve (cf. [13]), few approaches to assessment
actually even explicitly consider assessment performance
in terms of the outcomes of using the assessment
results in their intended contexts of use [32,39]. Concerns
have also been expressed that the emphasis in
environmental impact assessment has been more on
process and procedure, rather than on purpose and
effects [40,41].
 
Assessment-policy, as well as related science-policy
and research-practice, relationships have recently been
subjects of intense discussion and several characterizations
of the interfaces or boundaries in between them
have been presented from different viewpoints. For
example Sterk et al. [42] have characterized five boundary
arrangements of varying levels of engagement
between science and policy, van Kerkhoff and Lebel [43]
have presented six categories of relationships between
research-based knowledge and action, a continuum of
increasing engagement and power sharing, and Cashmore
[40] has described a spectrum of five models
representing varying conceptions of the role of science,
and participation, in environmental impact assessment.
In addition, the relationships have been considered in
multiple other discourses, e.g. on trans- and interdisciplinary
research [44-47], regulatory science [48], Integration
and implementation sciences [49], post-normal
science [50], integrated research [51], informing science
[52], knowledge brokerage [53,54], science integrators
[55], boundary organizations, objects and systems
[56-58], science-policy interfaces [59], participatory integrated
assessment [60,61], environmental health assessment
[32], making use of science in policy [62-64],
adaptive governance [65-67], policy integration [68], policy
practice [69], and policy analysis [70].
 
Although the viewpoints, bases and contexts in the
above mentioned discourses vary, in aggregate they
seem to be pointing to the direction of increased openness.
According to our interpretations in the context of
this paper, of the main lessons from these discourses
regarding assessment-policy interaction and participation
are as follows:
 
* The traditional model of disengaged scientific
assessment and policy making is increasingly
considered both by policy makers and researchers as
inadequate to address existing policy needs
sufficiently
 
* There is a need for more pragmatic needs-oriented
question setting in assessments
 
* Deeper engagement between assessment and policy
making is essential for policy effectiveness
 
* Stakeholder and public participation is essential for
relevance both in assessment and policy making
 
* Values are an important aspect of the needed
knowledge input for both assessment and policy
making.
 
This broad gradual movement could be characterized
as a shifting of both assessment and participation from
the lower degrees of involvement, e.g. informing or
information collection, towards the higher degrees of
involvement, e.g. co-deciding, delegated power, joint
planning, or partnering, in relation to policy making (cf.
[8,15,20,40]). The shift can also be identified e.g. by
observing the development in the perspectives to the
relationship between risk assessment and risk management
adopted in the publications of the NRC (National
Research Council (USA)): from strict disengagement in
the so called Red Book [71] to binding through deliberative
characterization in the so called Orange Book [72],
and on to an intertwined process of risk-based decision
making in the recent so called Silver Book [73]. Also the
role of stakeholder involvement has grown alongside the
development of assessment-policy interaction.
 
Participation, assessment, and policy making are
becoming to be perceived as an intertwined complex
that needs to be considered as a whole, not as separate
independent entities. The question of effective participation
is thus meaningful only in the broader context that
also concerns the purposes and effects of policy making
and the processes of producing the knowledge that it is
based on. However, as has been pointed out above, the
common current practices of participation, assessment,
and policy making are not necessarily always in line
with the latest discourses in the literature.
 
===Dimensions of openness===
 
One obstacle for effectively addressing the issue of effective
participation may be the concept of participation
itself. As long as the discourse focuses on participation,
one is easily misled to considering it as an independent
entity with purposes, goals and values in itself, without
explicitly relating it to the broader context of the processes
whose purposes it is intended to serve. The conceptual
framework we call the dimensions of openness
attempts to overcome this obstacle by considering the
issue of effective participation in terms of openness in

Revision as of 12:59, 20 April 2012


This page (including the files available for download at the bottom of this page) contains a draft version of a manuscript, whose final version is published and is available in the Environmental Health 2011. If referring to this text in scientific or other official papers, please refer to the published final version as: Mikko V. Pohjola and Jouni T. Tuomisto: Openness in participation, assessment, and policy making upon issues of environment and environmental health: a review of literature and recent project results. Environmental Health 2011, 10:58 http://www.ehjournal.net/content/10/1/58.

Title

Openness in participation, assessment, and policy making upon issues of environment and environmental health: a review of literature and recent project results

Authors and contact information

Mikko V. Pohjola, corresponding author
(National Institute for Health and Welfare, Kuopio Finland, firstname.lastname@thl.fi)
Jouni T. Tuomisto
(National Institute for Health and Welfare, Kuopio, Finland, firstname.lastname@thl.fi)

Abstract

Issues of environment and environmental health involve multiple interests regarding e.g. political, societal, economical, and public concerns represented by different kinds of organizations and individuals. Not surprisingly, stakeholder and public participation has become a major issue in environmental and environmental health policy and assessment. The need for participation has been discussed and reasoned by many, including environmental legislators around the world. In principle, participation is generally considered as desirable and the focus of most scholars and practitioners is on carrying out participation, and making participation more effective. In practice also doubts regarding the effectiveness and importance of participation exist among policy makers, assessors, and public, leading even to undermining participatory practices in policy making and assessment.

There are many possible purposes for participation, and different possible models of interaction between assessment and policy. A solid conceptual understanding of the interrelations between participation, assessment, and policy making is necessary in order to design and implement effective participatory practices. In this paper we ask, do current common conceptions of assessment, policy making and participation provide a sufficient framework for achieving effective participation? This question is addresses by reviewing the range of approaches to participation in assessment and policy making upon issues of environment and environmental health and some related insights from recent research projects, INTARESE and BENERIS.

Openness, considered e.g. in terms of a) scope of participation, b) access to information, c) scope of contribution, d) timing of openness, and e) impact of contribution, provides a new perspective to the relationships between participation, assessment and policy making. Participation, assessment, and policy making form an inherently intertwined complex with interrelated objectives and outcomes. Based on experiences from implementing openness, we suggest complete openness as the new default, deviation from which should be explicitly argued, in assessment and policy making upon issues of environment and environmental health. Openness does not undermine the existing participatory models and techniques, but provides conceptual means for their more effective application, and opens up avenues for developing new kinds of effective participatory practices that aim for societal development through collaborative creation of knowledge.

Introduction

Stakeholder and public participation is undoubtedly one of the most central topics in contemporary discourse regarding environmental and environmental health policy and assessment. Environmental issues typically involve multiple interests regarding e.g. political, societal, economical, and public concerns and particularly in cases where they are known or perceived to relate either directly or indirectly to human health and well-being, the concerns often also become very personal. In such a setting of physical, chemical, biological, and societal complexity, it is widely accepted as important to include plural perspectives, particularly from the “affected parties”, in the processes of policy making as well as the processes of producing information to guide and support policy making. As the idea of participation mainly builds on the theories and practices of democracy [1,2], this is particularly the case in the so called Western democracies, but increasingly also in countries not generally considered as democratic by their constitution, such as the People’s Republic of China [3,4].

In addition to being founded on the principles of democracy, public participation is addressed in several intergovernmental agreements, e.g. the Principle 10 of the Rio Declaration [5], and the Aarhus Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision- Making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters [6]. Also several laws on different levels of governance around the world, e.g. the EU Strategic Environmental Assessment Directive (2001/42/EC), the EU Public Participation Directive (2003/35/EC), The Law of the People’s Republic of China on Environmental Impact Assessment [4], and the Finnish Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Act (468/94) and corresponding EIA Decree (713/ 2006), explicitly consider public participation and describe legal frameworks for its application. The legal requirements provide, however, only one perspective to participation. Importance of participation is also argued for example based on ethical, political, pragmatic, and epistemological [7] as well as substantive, normative, and instrumental reasons [1], and participation is seen to have the potential to deliver e.g. substantive, procedural, and contextual effects [8,9]. Participation in assessment and policy making upon issues of environment and environmental health has become commonplace.

This paper explores the following question: do current common conceptions of assessment, policy making and participation provide a sufficient framework for achieving effective participation? By effectiveness we mean influence on the outcomes, i.e. changes in values, attitudes, and behavior in the society (cf. [10]), of the processes that the participation relates to, e.g. participatory assessments or policy making.

Policy making is here understood as decision making upon issues of societal importance and assessments are considered as systematic science-based endeavors of producing information to support policy making. Public participation and stakeholder involvement are here seen as instances of the same issue which is mostly referred to as participation, meaning contributions from the parties, organizations or individuals that do not have formal roles as decision makers or experts in the assessment or policy processes in question.

These broad definitions allow inclusion of various types of participation, assessment, and policy making, practiced in and designed for several societal, institutional and geographical contexts by many different actors. For example, risk assessment, environmental impact assessment, and health impact assessment, whether practiced by consultants, federal agencies, or academic researchers, in Europe, USA, or China, are considered as just different manifestations of the fundamentally same process of science-based policy support. They are, however, clearly distinguishable from curiosity- driven research, ad hoc assessments, or assessments made to justify predetermined decisions. Here we focus on issues relevant to environment and environmental health, but the implications can be extended also to many other substantive contexts.

Answers to the question are sought for by discussing recent literature relevant to the question. That knowledge is complemented with some insights from recent research projects, INTARESE (Integrated Assessment of Health Risks of Environmental Stressors in Europe) [11] and BENERIS (Benefit-Risk Assessment of Food: an Iterative Value-of-Information Approach) [12].

INTARESE was an EU-funded research project running from 2005 to 2011, developing methodology and tools for integrated environmental health impact assessment (IEHIA), and testing them in case studies. BENERIS was also an EU-funded research project running from 2006 to 2009, developing a framework and tools for complicated benefit-risk situations, and applying them for analyzing benefits and risk of certain foods.

The review starts from purposes of participation and ends in consideration of openness. Overall it presents a new perspective to the relationships between participation, assessment, and policy making.

Review

Purpose of participation

The discourse on participation, involving both scholars and practitioners has primarily focused on implementation of participation while the multiple objectives and purposes of participation, particularly in relation to the objectives and purposes of the processes they relate to, have received much less attention [13]. This discourse has resulted for example in various guidance documents for stakeholder involvement [8,14,15], detailed presentation and discussion of various models for public participation, [16-21], and analysis of the applicability of participation techniques [22-24]. Although they are all important contributions to developing understanding about participation and its implementation, it is not always easy to identify how they link to the “outcome effectiveness of participatory processes in their societal context”, as Newig [25] put it in developing his analytical framework for evaluating the impact of participation to improved environmental quality. Many means for public participation exist, but the ends they serve may not always be explicitly identified (for more on the theory of means-ends relationships, see e.g. [26]).

Despite the theoretical stance that participation is generally viewed as highly desirable and its benefits are often assumed to be obvious and substantial [13], the practices of policy making and assessment do not always represent this view. For instance, in a Finnish environmental permit case on a waste treatment activity the decision-maker, the permit applicant, as well as the stakeholders all questioned the meaningfulness of participation in the process, although in principle participation was seen as important by all [27]. The inconsistent utilization of public’s contributions has also been seen as a general weakness in the Finnish environmental impact assessment system due to being strongly dependent on the developer’s attitudes towards participation as well as the weak links between the assessment and related decision making processes [28]. This can be assumed representative of many other environmental impact assessment systems conducted under the EU Environmental Impact Assessment Directive (85/337/EEC) as well. Also in Canada the record of project-based environmental assessment in delivering on the promise of meaningful public participation has been identified as less than promising [29].

A major source of the problem with participation is that it has been more focused on process and access, rather than on outcomes [29]. It appears that the issue of effective participation needs to be considered in terms of the different possible purposes of both participation and assessment as well as their roles in the related policy making processes. O’Faircheallaigh [13] has presented a nice characterization of ten specific purposes and activities, categorized under three broad purposes, for public participation in environmental impact assessment. The characterization is made in such a generic way, i.e. not bound to any specifics of contemporary environmental impact assessment practices, that we here assume it generalizable to all policy making and assessment regarding environmental and environmental health issues. According to

O’Faircheallaigh [13] the three broad purposes for participation are:

  • Obtain public input into decisions taken elsewhere
  • Share decision making with public
  • Alter distribution of power and structures of decision making

These categories roughly correspond to 1) participation influencing assessments and (potentially) their outputs, 2) participation influencing policy making and (potentially) policy decisions, and 3) participation as a means for influencing policy making from outside the existing institutional policy making structures. Within the broad purposes there can be several more specific sub-purposes, many of which are identified and discussed by O’Faircheallaigh [13], e.g. according to the kinds of expected, desired or allowed participant contributions. It is important to note that the purposes for participation are not exclusive, but can, and in fact often do, co-exist and interact. Advancing of different purposes of participation is strongly dependent on the attitudes towards participation among those who control the policy making and assessment processes, but also the types of interaction between assessment and policy making. Particularly this becomes apparent when attempting to advance several specific purposes of participation across categories, for example simultaneously filling information gaps with local knowledge, inviting public to decision making, and especially empowering marginalized groups (cf. [13]).

The relationships between participation, assessment, policy making, and their outcomes are outlined in Figure 1 and discussed in following sections.

Role of participation in assessment

There are multiple kinds of assessment that serve different purposes and address different kinds of questions, and thereby provide different contexts for participation. For example, Pope et al. [30] have differentiated between a) ex-post, project-based assessments (a typical kind for environmental impact assessment), b) ex-ante, objectives- led assessment (a typical kind for strategic environmental assessment), and c) (a more theoretical) assessment for sustainability. Briggs [31], on the other hand has differentiated between i) diagnostic assessment (does a problem exist, is policy action needed?), ii) prognostic assessment (implications of potential policy options, which option to choose?), and iii) summative assessments (effectiveness of existing policies). Assessment approaches may also be characterized according to their contexts of development and application as more regulatory or academic in their nature [32].

Many other classifications exist and new ones could be made, but what is important from the point of view of participation in assessments is the possible influence that is allowed for participation in different assessment settings. For example, does the assessment structure allow for rethinking a project at the time the public is engaged in a project-based environmental assessment (cf. [29])?, can the stakeholders influence the choice of policy options to be considered in a prognostic integrated environmental health impact assessment (cf. [31])?, or does a down-stream user of a chemical product have any other role besides providing assessors with information on specific chemical use contexts in a REACH (Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemical Substances (EU)) chemical safety assessment [33]? The framing of an assessment approach can be a significant constraining factor for potential effectivness of participation.

Quite often stakeholder involvement and public participation are seen as specific steps or stages in the assessment process (e.g. [31,34,35], Finnish EIA Act (468/94)), which may limit the possible influence of participation to only certain questions topical at that particular stage. Also according to the study on the state-of-the-art in benefit-risk analysis conducted in the BEPRARIBEAN (Best Practices for Risk-Benefit Analysis of Foods) project [36], the commonly applied, contemporarily well established approaches to environmental health assessment treat stakeholder involvement and public participation rather as an add-on, often brought about by legal requirements, than as an essential aspect of assessment or decision making processes [32].

Role of participation in policy making

On the other hand, in many aspects the level of influence that participation in assessments can have is not directly in control of the assessors. For example, in the aforementioned Finnish environmental impact assessment system, where participation is legally enforced as a part of the assessment process, the decision making structures outside the assessment may induce that certain aspects of assessment results, e.g. in particular public concerns regarding social impacts, cannot be given weight in the decision making [28]. Also the Finnish land use planning system, in which there are legal requirements for impact assessment including public participation, treats planning (zoning) and development as separate processes, which means that the details of planned development, issues of great public interest, are outside the scope of assessment and stakeholder involvement [37]. Both of these examples describe national implementations of EU directives, and are thereby somewhat representative of the whole target area of the corresponding EU legislation.

The influence of assessment, participation, as well as all other potential inputs to policy making is much determined by the setting in which policy decisions are being made. As an example from another kind of societal context, the Chinese authorities may welcome public participation if it improves the quality of information available to government decision makers, but may not at all be willing to give public the power to contribute to and influence decision making by participating in the formulation of a proposal, the whole assessment process, the implementation, and the evaluation of a proposal [4,13].

Indirect participatory influence

If no satisfactory roles are provided for public, or even expert, input directly in decision making or indirectly through assessment, alternative options for influencing policy need to be looked for outside the institutionalized decision making structures, as pointed out also by O’Faircheallaigh [13]. In fact, quite many, particularly the more academic, assessment approaches, although explicitly aiming to support policy making, do not explicitly describe their linkages to any particular specific policy uses [32]. This may be interpreted indicative of their, more or less implicit, intentions to activate also other channels than only direct influence to policy making. An alternative way to advance the societal purposes of assessments is e.g. to promote social learning among public officials, market players, and citizens. Also in the recent evaluation of the existing EIA legislation in Finland the indirect influence of the information and knowledge obtained in the participatory assessment, which does not directly serve the formal sectoral permit decision processes related to the assessed project, was interpreted as an important aspect of the Finnish EIA system by contributing to the general awareness among the society upon the environmental and health impacts of on-going developments [38].

Assessment-policy interaction

As has been pointed out above, the interaction between assessment and policy making can be crucial for effective participation. Another question then is what influences the assessment results, potentially influenced by participation, have in the related decision making processes. Although often quite credulously assumed by assessors and assessment scholars that assessments have significant impacts to the decision making processes they aim to serve (cf. [13]), few approaches to assessment actually even explicitly consider assessment performance in terms of the outcomes of using the assessment results in their intended contexts of use [32,39]. Concerns have also been expressed that the emphasis in environmental impact assessment has been more on process and procedure, rather than on purpose and effects [40,41].

Assessment-policy, as well as related science-policy and research-practice, relationships have recently been subjects of intense discussion and several characterizations of the interfaces or boundaries in between them have been presented from different viewpoints. For example Sterk et al. [42] have characterized five boundary arrangements of varying levels of engagement between science and policy, van Kerkhoff and Lebel [43] have presented six categories of relationships between research-based knowledge and action, a continuum of increasing engagement and power sharing, and Cashmore [40] has described a spectrum of five models representing varying conceptions of the role of science, and participation, in environmental impact assessment. In addition, the relationships have been considered in multiple other discourses, e.g. on trans- and interdisciplinary research [44-47], regulatory science [48], Integration and implementation sciences [49], post-normal science [50], integrated research [51], informing science [52], knowledge brokerage [53,54], science integrators [55], boundary organizations, objects and systems [56-58], science-policy interfaces [59], participatory integrated assessment [60,61], environmental health assessment [32], making use of science in policy [62-64], adaptive governance [65-67], policy integration [68], policy practice [69], and policy analysis [70].

Although the viewpoints, bases and contexts in the above mentioned discourses vary, in aggregate they seem to be pointing to the direction of increased openness. According to our interpretations in the context of this paper, of the main lessons from these discourses regarding assessment-policy interaction and participation are as follows:

  • The traditional model of disengaged scientific

assessment and policy making is increasingly considered both by policy makers and researchers as inadequate to address existing policy needs sufficiently

  • There is a need for more pragmatic needs-oriented

question setting in assessments

  • Deeper engagement between assessment and policy

making is essential for policy effectiveness

  • Stakeholder and public participation is essential for

relevance both in assessment and policy making

  • Values are an important aspect of the needed

knowledge input for both assessment and policy making.

This broad gradual movement could be characterized as a shifting of both assessment and participation from the lower degrees of involvement, e.g. informing or information collection, towards the higher degrees of involvement, e.g. co-deciding, delegated power, joint planning, or partnering, in relation to policy making (cf. [8,15,20,40]). The shift can also be identified e.g. by observing the development in the perspectives to the relationship between risk assessment and risk management adopted in the publications of the NRC (National Research Council (USA)): from strict disengagement in the so called Red Book [71] to binding through deliberative characterization in the so called Orange Book [72], and on to an intertwined process of risk-based decision making in the recent so called Silver Book [73]. Also the role of stakeholder involvement has grown alongside the development of assessment-policy interaction.

Participation, assessment, and policy making are becoming to be perceived as an intertwined complex that needs to be considered as a whole, not as separate independent entities. The question of effective participation is thus meaningful only in the broader context that also concerns the purposes and effects of policy making and the processes of producing the knowledge that it is based on. However, as has been pointed out above, the common current practices of participation, assessment, and policy making are not necessarily always in line with the latest discourses in the literature.

Dimensions of openness

One obstacle for effectively addressing the issue of effective participation may be the concept of participation itself. As long as the discourse focuses on participation, one is easily misled to considering it as an independent entity with purposes, goals and values in itself, without explicitly relating it to the broader context of the processes whose purposes it is intended to serve. The conceptual framework we call the dimensions of openness attempts to overcome this obstacle by considering the issue of effective participation in terms of openness in