Modernising public local inquiries - analysis of consultation responses: outline and some reflections
Series: Scottish Planning and Environmental Law ; (107) February 2005, 7-10(4)Publication details: 2005Subject(s): Online resources: Summary: Outlines "Modernising public local inquiries - analysis of consultation responses" (MPLI) published by the Scottish Executive Development Department in December 2004. Provides further comment on the original consultation paper and the responses to it. MPLI is in essence a detailed development of the question how to make appeal inquiries more accessible and less intimidating and its proposals aim to strengthen the current appeals system while enabling decisions to be made quickly. Concludes that responses to MPLI gave broad if qualified support to the majority of the proposals including a move to a less adversarial appeal systems, which might facilitate greater public participation. References. View the analysis of consultation responses and the original consultation paper on www.scotland.gov.uk.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal article | London Journal article | ABS68859 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 129127-1001 |
Outlines "Modernising public local inquiries - analysis of consultation responses" (MPLI) published by the Scottish Executive Development Department in December 2004. Provides further comment on the original consultation paper and the responses to it. MPLI is in essence a detailed development of the question how to make appeal inquiries more accessible and less intimidating and its proposals aim to strengthen the current appeals system while enabling decisions to be made quickly. Concludes that responses to MPLI gave broad if qualified support to the majority of the proposals including a move to a less adversarial appeal systems, which might facilitate greater public participation. References. View the analysis of consultation responses and the original consultation paper on www.scotland.gov.uk.