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Transparency in conservation – rare species, secret files, and democracy




Alaotsikkorare species, secret files, and democracy

TekijätMarkku Oksanen, Anne Kumpula

KustantajaTaylor & Francis

KustannuspaikkaLondon

Julkaisuvuosi2013

JournalEnvironmental Politics

Lehden akronyymienv pol

Numero sarjassa6

Vuosikerta22

Numero6

Aloitussivu975

Lopetussivu991

Sivujen määrä17

ISSN0964-4016

eISSN1743-8934

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/09644016.2013.775726

Verkko-osoitehttp://www.tandfonline.com/loi/fenp20#.Uq7b5nen5ek


Tiivistelmä
In many areas of environmental policy, there are clashing trends and conflicting
views concerning the accessibility of information and its appropriate
use. Some countries restrict access to environmental information if access
compromises the protection of species, but this contrasts with environmentalist
claims for transparency, the right to know, and the creation of the
‘green public sphere’. Can access to (biodiversity) information ever be
justifiably denied? The paradoxical trends in environmental policy can be
explained in terms of the dual role of information: as much as it contributes
to environmental causes, it simultaneously enables people to utilise or
destroy the objects of preservation. While recognising the problematic nature
of restricting transparency, epistemic asymmetries – the kind of case in
which public authorities have access to such information to which the public
is denied access – can sometimes be justified in terms of security.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:36