Authors
Neil Simcock
Publication date
2016/12/31
Journal
Land Use Policy
Volume
59
Pages
467-477
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
In policy and activist discourses there is often an expectation that community wind energy projects will avoid the conflicts and local opposition often associated with private-developer-led developments. However, the empirical validity of this assertion has not been widely investigated. In previous research on private-developer wind projects, the fairness of decision-making processes (‘procedural justice’) during project implementation has been identified as an important factor in shaping local acceptance, but has not been deeply studied in relation to community-led schemes. Using in-depth qualitative research of a proposed community wind project in South Yorkshire, this paper examines stakeholder interpretations of procedural justice during the design and siting of this scheme. Although the project leaders explicitly aimed for a fair and ‘democratic’ implementation process, considerable conflict emerged over …
Total citations
201720182019202020212022202320241117212530303911