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001 | 9.852623 |
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003 | CaOODSP |
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005 | 20221107154628 |
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007 | cr ||||||||||| |
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008 | 180228s1992 quc |o f000 0 eng d |
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040 | |aCaOODSP|beng |
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043 | |an-cn--- |
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086 | 1 |aEn107-3/14-1992E-PDF |
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100 | 1 |aGlenn, John Edward. |
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245 | 10|aDecision-making regimes governing environmental assessment in Canada |h[electronic resource] / |cJohn Edward Glenn. |
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260 | |a[Hull, Quebec] : |bCanadian Environmental Assessment Research Council, |c1992. |
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300 | |a39 p. |
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500 | |aCover title. |
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500 | |a"August 1992." |
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500 | |a"A manuscript report prepared for the Canadian Environmental Assessment Research Council." |
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500 | |aDigitized edition from print [produced by Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency]. |
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504 | |aIncludes bibliographic references. |
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520 | 3 |a"Environmental assessment in Canada has traditionally operated according to the informal model of executive power. According to this model, executive officials are granted considerable discretion to apply broadly-phrased assessment legislation. In a series of recent cases concerning federal environmental assessment activities under the Environmental Assessment Review Process Guidelines Order, however, Canadian courts went some way towards imposing a much more rigid and legalistic model of decision-making upon federal officials. Due to the Canadian executive’s ability to forestall activist jurisprudence or overcome such activism as does occur, however, the traditional model of environmental assessment decision-making, based on the prudential exercise of executive discretion, will probably continue to inform environmental decision-making well into the foreseeable future"--Abstract, p. 4. |
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692 | 07|2gccst|aEnvironmental impact assessment |
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710 | 1 |aCanada. |bCanadian Environmental Assessment Agency. |
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856 | 40|qPDF|s313 KB|uhttps://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2018/acee-ceaa/En107-3-14-1992-eng.pdf |
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