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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://nhuir.nhu.edu.tw/handle/987654321/23718


    Title: Contested Governance between Politics and Professionalism in Taiwan
    Authors: 何明修;Ho, Ming-Sho
    Contributors: 應用社會學系
    Date: 2004
    Issue Date: 2015-12-23 14:21:42 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: This essay critically examines the evolution of the environmental impact assessment (EIA) in Taiwan. The ‘American-style’ EIA was originally introduced in Taiwan as an economic policy-making instrument. During the 1980s, grassroots environmental protests rose. The state first met the popular opposition by denying their professional status, and then sought a more peaceful resolution by upgrading the EIA. In 1994, owing to the combined effects of more accountable parliamentary and environmentalists' lobbying, the EIA was finally codified. Democratization also made the codified EIA more powerful and professional, as environmentalists preferred. The latter part of this essay examines the actual practice of the EIA since 1995, with special attention to some controversial cases. The current EIA failed the proclaimed standard of “science and objectivity,” as politics lurked in the disguise of professionalism.
    Relation: Journal of Contemporary Asia
    vol. 34, no. 2
    pp.238-253
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Applied Sociology, The M.A. Program of Sociology] Periodical Articles

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