- Environmental and Social Impact Assessments
- Mining and Resource Management
- Urban Green Space and Health
- Flood Risk Assessment and Management
- Disaster Management and Resilience
- Evaluation and Performance Assessment
- Labor Movements and Unions
- Sport and Mega-Event Impacts
- Marine and coastal plant biology
- Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
- Construction Project Management and Performance
- Urban Planning and Governance
- Urban Transport and Accessibility
- Sustainability and Climate Change Governance
- Coastal and Marine Management
- Climate Change and Health Impacts
- Island Studies and Pacific Affairs
- Occupational Health and Safety Research
- Urban Agriculture and Sustainability
- Migration and Labor Dynamics
University of Salford
2020-2021
University College Cork
2021
University of Liverpool
2014-2019
This paper explores how health aspects connected with the planning of urban green space are currently supported through two types impact assessments: assessment (HIA) and environmental assessment, including strategic (SEA) policies, plans programmes (EIA) projects. Seven HIAs five EIAs/SEAs from UK, US, Netherlands, Austria Germany reviewed, using an analytical framework designed on basis a literature review. An important finding is that whilst all follow problem-/objectives-driven approach,...
The Oxford Handbook of Megaproject Management represents an ambitious attempt to bring together a vast array scholarship from potentially disparate fields, but also begin construct the fou...
In this paper we briefly review the state of academic research in UK field Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) and Strategic (SEA). Through consideration number articles related to EIA SEA published journals contribution post-graduate students' (PhD master level) dissertation theses aim understand where activity has occurred over recent decades. Simple literature database searches reveal that is an active environment for researchers students with numerous universities engaged teaching...
The impact of flood events in the UK has drawn attention to limitations associated with traditional defence regimes. In recognition this there been a significant level advocacy for systems based approach which assumes greater role spatial planning. This paper considers extent strategic assessment contributes toward consideration flooding within draws on four cases from England and Scotland. Specific is given nature management approaches considered recommendations presented. research...
This paper takes an historical perspective to examine the social and community motivations for public parks their funding. Public can be some of most valuable green infrastructure assets; understanding why they were created how have developed usefully inform current international practice. Analysis is one UK's first parks, Peel Park, Salford, Greater Manchester draws on documentary material from Park's creation in 1840s its refurbishment 2010s. Common long-lived expectations cohesion are...
Strategic forms of impact assessment have seen increased application around the world since their conception. Expansion has produced considerable variation and this range tools processes can create practitioner confusion blurred boundaries in practice. This research draws on empirical data from England Scotland to examine different systems understand how purposes strategic are framed consider translated into Four key examined; overcoming EIA shortcomings, thinking, representation environment...
Literature provides a basis for understanding the relationship between strategic environmental assessment (SEA) and plan-making. This research furthers this by examining dialogue SEA plan-making more closely. The draws on communicative planning, paradigm shifts theories of power. Four case studies from Scotland England are analysed via interviews documentary evidence. It is found that constrained tiered plan-making, pre-existing commitments political context. Capabilities to enable can be...
"Angus Morrison-Saunders and Jenny Pope." Impact Assessment Project Appraisal, 39(6), pp. 514–515