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  • Procedural Justice and the Australian Environment: The case of the Wonthaggi Water Desalination Plant

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    Author(s)
    King, Tanya
    Murphy, Kristina
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Murphy, Kristina
    Year published
    2009
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    Abstract
    Drier conditions in Australia have compelled governments to implement various projects to address current or impending water shortages. Such projects have not always been popular with the local community who are directly affected by this infrastructure, with 'procedural justice' emerging as a critical issue. This paper analyses issues of public perceptions of 'procedural justice' in implementing environmental projects in regional areas, in the context of the recently approved desalination plant in the regional Victorian town of Wonthaggi. Drawing on both qualitative and quantitative data from a survey of 316 Wonthaggi ...
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    Drier conditions in Australia have compelled governments to implement various projects to address current or impending water shortages. Such projects have not always been popular with the local community who are directly affected by this infrastructure, with 'procedural justice' emerging as a critical issue. This paper analyses issues of public perceptions of 'procedural justice' in implementing environmental projects in regional areas, in the context of the recently approved desalination plant in the regional Victorian town of Wonthaggi. Drawing on both qualitative and quantitative data from a survey of 316 Wonthaggi residents, we show that one of the major predictors of residents' resistance toward accepting the building of the desalination plant was explained by perceptions of procedural injustice. We further argue that inadequate attention to the particular political history of the region has compounded the sense that the plant implementation has been unfair. Attention to such political histories is vital to avoiding conflict with local stakeholders and to the successful and ethical implementation of development projects in regional areas.
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    Journal Title
    Public Policy
    Volume
    4
    Issue
    2
    Publisher URI
    https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/INFORMIT.117351434598164
    Copyright Statement
    © 2009 Curtin University. The attached file is reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version.
    Subject
    Psychology not elsewhere classified
    Policy and Administration
    Political Science
    Other Studies in Human Society
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/40085
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    • Journal articles

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