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ID161688
Title ProperNegotiating the Problem of Airport Noise
Other Title InformationComparative Lessons from the Australian Experience
LanguageENG
AuthorRobert Freestone Douglas Baker ;  Freestone, Robert ;  Baker, Douglas
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper critically examines recent responses by and interactions between stakeholders in negotiating the acceptability of aircraft noise standards in Australia in order to help inform debate in Britain. It investigates the interplay of the politics of noise with the broader land use planning context focusing on the role of government, airports, community interests, and the development sector. Different local environments inevitably frame diverse contexts, but the pervasive challenge is in securing the acceptable trade‐off between the economic dividends promised by airports and local quality of life. Discussion is structured around four main issues: an introduction to the Australian politics of airport noise, an historical timeline of key contextual events, identification of the major actors in the noise governance framework, and a focus on an issue of increasing political significance, namely the different positions of airports and developers in the increasing intensification of urban development.
`In' analytical NotePolitical Quarterly Vol. 89, No.3; Jul-Sep 2018: p.457-65
Journal SourcePolitical Quarterly 2018-09 89, 3
Key WordsComparative Lessons ;  Airport Noise ;  Australian Experience