A critical review of the dominant lines of argumentation on the need for strategic environmental assessment

In spite of almost two decades of experience, Strategic Environmental Assessment's (SEA) foundations remain unclear to the point that the case for needing an instrument called ‘SEA’ could be questioned. The aim is to ask: what problems was SEA meant to solve, and what needs was it meant to addr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental impact assessment review 2007-10, Vol.27 (7), p.585-606
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container_title Environmental impact assessment review
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creator Bina, Olivia
description In spite of almost two decades of experience, Strategic Environmental Assessment's (SEA) foundations remain unclear to the point that the case for needing an instrument called ‘SEA’ could be questioned. The aim is to ask: what problems was SEA meant to solve, and what needs was it meant to address, by reflecting on the strengths and weaknesses of SEA thinking to date. I do so by organising the reasons and arguments offered by scholars and practitioners under three ‘lines of argumentation’ related to the strategic dimension of SEA, its methods and purpose. I explore how each line of argumentation affects the concept of (the purpose and role) and approach to (the procedures, methods and tools) SEA. The problematisation of these arguments and their evolution makes a case for the urgent acknowledgment of misleading simplifications. From this analysis I propose a number of promising fields of inquiry that could help respond to the growing expectations attached to SEA and strengthen its ‘strategic’ dimension: revisiting the concept of assessment in SEA, promoting strategies for the introduction of SEA, and strengthening the contribution of theory to SEA practice.
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subjects Approach
Conceptualization
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENTS
Environmental impact studies
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
EVOLUTION
Lines of argumentation
Methodology
Purpose
Research trends
REVIEWS
Role
SEA
strategic
Strategic planning
title A critical review of the dominant lines of argumentation on the need for strategic environmental assessment
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