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Effectiveness of strategic environmental assessment in Canada under directive-based and informal practice
Authors:Bram Noble  Robert Gibson  Lisa White  Jill Blakley  Peter Croal  Kelechi Nwanekezie
Affiliation:1. Department of Geography &2. Planning, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada;3. Environment &4. Resource Studies, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada;5. Faculty of Engineering, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada;6. Independent Environmental Consultant, Ottawa, Canada
Abstract:This article explores the diversity of strategic environmental assessment (SEA) practice in Canada and lessons for improving the effectiveness of SEA. There are multiple dimensions to effectiveness, but core to SEA effectiveness is its strategic nature. SEA under the Canadian federal Cabinet directive is approached largely as an impact assessment tool, and effectiveness evaluated based on compliance. Practice is entrenched in project-based assessment principles, but with no mandatory provision for public engagement, which limits the potential effectiveness of SEA. External to the Cabinet directive, across Canada’s provinces and territories, SEA and SEA-like practices are occurring in diverse forms and represent the more advanced and exemplary cases. A common challenge to SEA effectiveness, however, is that applications are often limited by their ad hoc nature and disconnected from any larger and formal system of participatory and integrated policy, planning and development decision making.
Keywords:Effectiveness  strategic environmental assessment  strategic thinking  Canadian cabinet directive  tiering
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