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Many contemporary surveillance practices take place in information
infrastructures which are from the public domain. Although they
have far reaching consequences for both citizens and their rights,
they are not always subject to regulatory demands and oversight.
This being said, democratic fora where citizens and institutions
may question such practices cannot be mobilised without widespread
awareness of the dangers and consequences of surveillance practices
and who is responsible for them. Through an analysis of
surveillance controversies across Europe, this book not only
examines the troublesome relationship between surveillance and
democracy; but also highlights the vested interests which maintain
the status quo. Using a participatory theory lens, Surveillance and
Democracy in Europe reveals the historical, social, political and
legal antecedents of the current state of affairs. Arguing that
participation is a sensitising concept which enables a wide array
of surveillance practices and processes to be interrogated, this
insightful volume will appeal to students and researchers
interested in fields such as public administration and policy,
political studies, organisational behaviour and surveillance and
privacy.
Many contemporary surveillance practices take place in information
infrastructures which are from the public domain. Although they
have far reaching consequences for both citizens and their rights,
they are not always subject to regulatory demands and oversight.
This being said, democratic fora where citizens and institutions
may question such practices cannot be mobilised without widespread
awareness of the dangers and consequences of surveillance practices
and who is responsible for them. Through an analysis of
surveillance controversies across Europe, this book not only
examines the troublesome relationship between surveillance and
democracy; but also highlights the vested interests which maintain
the status quo. Using a participatory theory lens, Surveillance and
Democracy in Europe reveals the historical, social, political and
legal antecedents of the current state of affairs. Arguing that
participation is a sensitising concept which enables a wide array
of surveillance practices and processes to be interrogated, this
insightful volume will appeal to students and researchers
interested in fields such as public administration and policy,
political studies, organisational behaviour and surveillance and
privacy.
Keeping pace with planning law is no easy matter. The mass of
primary and secondary legislation in this field, allied to local
and national policy and guidance, make this the most intensively
regulated area of the law. This comprehensive practitioner's
handbook covers the widest possible range of planning topics in a
single volume and is written for planning practitioners in the
private and public sectors. This book combines a readily accessible
narrative with a substantial body of footnotes for those looking
for more detail when it comes to case law and statutory materials.
Planning Law: A Practitioner's Handbook provides answers for the
busy planning professional to a whole range of problems which
commonly arise in the day-to-day practice of planning
practitioners. Its advantage lies in the fact that it is a single
up-to-date reference book covering a broad range of topics which
might otherwise only be found in a number of specialist texts. It
also contains sections on village greens, assets of community
value, public rights of way, and gypsies and travellers, all of
which impact on the realisation of land for planning purposes. The
inclusion of these topics will be of particular value to
practitioners in the public sector looking for up-to-date guidance
in these fields.
In a world that is shifting away from fossil fuels in response to
the threat of climate change, the UK’s low carbon policies have
seen renewable electricity capacity increase by more than three
times since 2010. The future is clearly one of unremitting growth
in electricity generation from wind and solar farms. Renewable
Energy from Wind and Solar Power: Law and Regulation is concerned
with the law and regulation of electricity generation in the case
of the two most popular sources of energy derived from renewable
resources. It covers up-to-date national policy and guidance
relevant to electricity generation collected from renewable
resources. There is also coverage of the powers of local planning
authorities and of the Secretary of State, along with devolved
powers in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, in dealing with
onshore and offshore energy projects along with the impact of
Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects under the 2008 Act.
This book also covers consents under sections 36 (onshore and
offshore wind generation) and 37 (overhead lines) of the
Electricity Act 1989 and the grant of FEBA licences from the Marine
and Fisheries Agency in the case of offshore consents. The
availability of financial assistance for the generation and export
of renewable energy to the grid is also dealt with, and there are
several case studies examining a number of recent decisions of the
courts, the Secretary of State, inspectors and reporters, involving
wind and solar energy proposals. Renewable Energy from Wind and
Solar Power: Law and Regulation will be an invaluable reference for
lawyers, planning professionals and operators in the relevant
sectors. It will also be of interest to others in showing how the
industry is developing and of the regulatory processes involved in
securing consents for the commercial development of energy from
wind and solar power.
Written between 1920 and 1932, all five were first published in
small editions, three of them in France. These are pivotal and
seminal works, books in which a great writer was charting the
course he later would follow, experimenting freely, boldly
searching for a new kind of prose style to express "the power of
the imagination to hold human beings to life and propel them
onward." The prose-poem improvisations (Kora in Hell) . . . the
interweaving of prose and poetry in alternating passages (Spring
and All and The Descent of Winter) . . . an antinovel whose subject
is the impossibility of writing "The Great American Novel" in
America . . . automatic writing (A Novelette) . . . these are the
challenges which Williams accepted and brilliantly met in his early
work.
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