Planning & Management Philosophy Flashcards

1
Q

What is the issue between government vs. individual control?

A

We often look to the government to ensure health and environmental policies, but some believe individuals need more say. (ex, composting in waterloo)

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2
Q

What is the issue for planners with competing public values?

A

You have to bring together different values and decide what is best. (ex, Oka Crisis)

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3
Q

What is the issue with government jurisdiction?

A

There are different types of land and governments, so there is often conflict over who has jurisdiction (ex, between prov & fed govt)

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4
Q

What is the issue with protection against selfish actions?

A

Everyone wants to take what they can get while they can get it, which leads to resource depletion (no one can have anything)

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5
Q

What is the issue with finding the “best means to an end”?

A

Everyone often agrees on the outcome, just not how to get there. (ex, UW beaver issue)

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6
Q

What is the issue with political power relationships?

A

Democracy is often good, but minority tend to have less say (power)… should consider to make a fair decision

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7
Q

What are the 3 methods for implementing change?

A
  1. Regulation
  2. Education
  3. Economic
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8
Q

Regulation application is….

A

The precautionary principle (See water ethics cards)

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9
Q

What are the pros and cons of the precautionary principle?

A

Pros: - recognize potential harm, uncertainty & actions are warranted
Cons: - most technology creation involved risks, so this potentially inhibits progress
- often ignores the benefits because it focuses on the implications

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10
Q

Education application is….

A

Public Participation

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11
Q

Define Public Participation

A

Public describes those with interest in a decision other than the govt, developer or other authority. They may have interest because of: - proximity - economics - land use - issues - values

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12
Q

Economics application is….

A

Ecosystem services… extensive and rapid ecosystem change by humans leads to degradation. There are challenges to meet human needs with systems as we take services for granted.

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13
Q

Name the 4 types of ecosystem services

A
  1. Provisioning - supply of goods directly benefitting people (ie, timber, medicinal plants)
  2. Regulating - range of functions, not usually considered (ie, pollinators, carbon storing)
  3. Supporting - don’t directly benefit people, but are essential (ie, soil, plant growth)
  4. Cultural - contributes to societal needs/desires or has spiritual value (ex, sacred areas, aesthetic beauty)
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14
Q

How do we apply ecosystem services?

A

Incorporate the cost of ecosystem services into price for the true cost of goods & services (ie, gas prices, pay stewards of land for protecting clean water) Ex, Sierra Leone case study

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15
Q

What is the participatory approach?

A

Valuing stakeholders in decision making processes… essential for overall happiness (vernacular knowledge - combining community values with scientific knowledge)

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