1 / 16

Social Impact assessment

Social Impact assessment. What is social impact assessment. The systematic analysis in advance of development or policy changes that will bring social change to a community. Social Impact assessment . SIAs provide a systematic framework to:

umeko
Download Presentation

Social Impact assessment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social Impact assessment

  2. What is social impact assessment • The systematic analysis in advance of development or policy changes that will bring social change to a community.

  3. Social Impact assessment SIAs provide a systematic framework to: • Anticipate social change from a project or policy change • Measure baseline data and project impacts • Look at the potential social implications • Communicate changes to the community • Outline steps to mitigate or enhance negative or positive aspects of change • See that the benefits of change do not empower some groups over others

  4. Social Impact Assessment SIAs should • Involve as many community members as possible • Acknowledge negative consequences so they can be addressed in an open manner • Seek to balance both economic needs with social needs

  5. History of SIA Federal US Law requires an Environmental Impact Assessment (US National Environmental Policy Act of 1969—NEPA)for major projects or policy changes • Projects that generate significant alterations of the “Bio-Physical Environment” can impact human populations • Changing the natural environment impacts humans • SIAs are anticipatory

  6. SIA Participants • Project Proponent • Community • Government Agencies • Consultants • The Public

  7. Stages in Project/Policy Development • Planning and Development • Construction/Implementation • Operation/maintenance • Decommissioning/Abandonment

  8. Component Guidelines for SIA • Description of proposed actions • Relationship of the proposed action to land use plans • Probable impacts on the ecology • Alternative to proposes actions • Identifying unavoidable adverse effects • Local short term impacts and long-term issues • Identifying irreversible and irretrievable impacts • Other considerations such as psychological impacts

  9. SIA Variables Population Change • Population change • Influx of (temporary) workers • Presence of seasonal residents • Dislocation/Relocation of families • Changes in composition

  10. SIA Variables Community/Institutional Arrangements • Attitudes towards projects • Interest Group Activities • Changes in local government • Planning and Zoning changes • Industrial diversification • Income and Wages • Income inequality • Employment of groups • Changing occupational choices

  11. SIA Variables Communities in Transition • New outside interests acting in the community • New coalitions of existing institutions • New social classes • Changes in industries • Changes in housing costs • Changes in the allocation of natural resources

  12. Individual and Family Level Impacts • Disruptions in living and movement patterns • New religious practices • Alteration in family structure • Disruption of social networks • Changes in public safety and health • Changes in leisure activities

  13. SIA Variables Community Infrastructure • Changes in utilities and roads • Land acquisition and selling • Effects on known cultural, historical, sacred, and archeological resources

  14. Three kinds of tools • Planning • Policy • Programs • projects • Policy • To act • To decide • Decision-Making • Determine social costs

  15. Scoping • Scope out the range of issues • Identify stakeholders • Governments • Project proponents • Project detractors • Community groups and organizations • Interested citizens • Native peoples • Special populations

  16. Mitigation and Enhancement Mitigation • First, try to avoid adverse impacts • Second, alternative designs to minimize impacts • Third, Compensate of adverse impacts

More Related