TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental citizenship and sustainable development
T2 - The case of waste facility siting in Taiwan
AU - Fan, Mei Fang
PY - 2008/11
Y1 - 2008/11
N2 - 10.1002/sd.353.abs This paper examines how issues of environmental citizenship play out in the context of an industrial waste facility siting controversy in Taipei, Taiwan, and the implications of this complex predicament for justice and sustainable development generally. It shows the ways in which local activists perceive the adverse effects of a development project that generates industrial waste and incinerator ash in their hometown. Local activists feel excluded from decision-making and frustrated by the lack of recognition by authorities. They complain that their local, contextualized knowledge and experiences are ignored. Local activists are concerned about ecological devastation and feel responsible for future generations. Instead of a NIMBY protest of selfish residents, local activists imagine themselves as active citizens fighting for justice and sustainability on a scale beyond their neighborhood. The case highlights the needs for institutional transparency, the recognition of multiple ways of knowing and new conceptions of the good life.
AB - 10.1002/sd.353.abs This paper examines how issues of environmental citizenship play out in the context of an industrial waste facility siting controversy in Taipei, Taiwan, and the implications of this complex predicament for justice and sustainable development generally. It shows the ways in which local activists perceive the adverse effects of a development project that generates industrial waste and incinerator ash in their hometown. Local activists feel excluded from decision-making and frustrated by the lack of recognition by authorities. They complain that their local, contextualized knowledge and experiences are ignored. Local activists are concerned about ecological devastation and feel responsible for future generations. Instead of a NIMBY protest of selfish residents, local activists imagine themselves as active citizens fighting for justice and sustainability on a scale beyond their neighborhood. The case highlights the needs for institutional transparency, the recognition of multiple ways of knowing and new conceptions of the good life.
KW - Environmental citizenship
KW - Environmental impact
KW - Environmental justice
KW - Stakeholder engagement
KW - Sustainable development
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=78649585363&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/sd.353
DO - 10.1002/sd.353
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:78649585363
SN - 0968-0802
VL - 16
SP - 381
EP - 389
JO - Sustainable Development
JF - Sustainable Development
IS - 6
ER -