Food for thought: conditions for discourse reflection in the light of environmental assessement
Publication date
2010
Authors
Runhaar, H.A.C.
Runhaar, P.R.
Oegema, T.
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
People tend to take notice of what is happening around them selectively. Discourses—frames through which
actors give meaning to aspects of the world—act as built-in filters that distinguish relevant from irrelevant
data. Use of knowledge generated by environmental assessments (EAs) in decision-making may be
understood from this perspective. Environmental knowledge that is inconsistent with dominant discourses
runs the risk of being ignored. Discourses on the value of EA as a tool for decision-making may have a similar
effect. Stimulating decision-makers and stakeholders to critically reflect on and reconsider their discourses in
the light of EAs—also known as frame reflection or policy learning—may enhance the probability that these
assessments and the knowledge that they generate impact upon decision-making. Up to now little has been
written about how discourse reflection in the context of EA can be promoted. Valuable inputs are fragmented
over different bodies of literature. In this paper we draw from these bodies to identify favourable conditions
for discourse reflection.
Keywords
Environmental assessment, Discourse, Frame, Scheme, Reflection, Double-loop learning