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Environmental Protection in the Tomsk Region of the Russian Federation: A Case Study
Authors:D Banks  A M Adam  V Bayliss  G M Hogg  W Bleuten  M Dees  O V Karnachuk  K Le Blansch  J Marquand
Institution:(1) Holymoor Consultancy, 86 Holymoor Road, Holymoorside, Chesterfield, Derbyshire, S42 7DX, United Kingdom , GB;(2) Tomsk State Committee for Environmental Protection, Ulitsa Kirovskaya 14, Tomsk, 634050, Russia , RU;(3) Centre for Training Policy Studies, University of Sheffield, Endcliffe Holt, 343 Fulwood Road, Sheffield, S10 3BQ, United Kingdom,;(4) Universiteit Utrecht, Ruimtelijke Wetenschapen, Fysische Geografie, Postbus 80.115, 3508 TC Utrecht, The Netherlands , NL;(5) Environmental Consultancy of the University of Sheffield (ECUS), Endcliffe Holt, 343 Fulwood Road, Sheffield, S10 3BQ, United Kingdom,;(6) Department of Plant Physiology and Biotechnology, Tomsk State University, Prospekt Lenina 36 Tomsky, 634050 Russia,;(7) B&A Groep Beleidsonderzoek & Advies, Postbus 829, 2501 CV Den Haag, The Netherlands,;(8) Mansfield College, University of Oxford, Mansfield Road, Oxford, OX1 3TF, United Kingdom,
Abstract:/ Implementation of environmental management in Russia is undergoing rapid changes. Federal responsibility rests with the Russian Federation State Committee for Environmental Protection (RFSCEP) and is delegated at regional level to local State Committees for Environmental Protection (SCEPs). This paper focuses on the functioning of the SCEP for Tomsk oblast' (region) in Siberia, which is strongly committed to forging constructive links with regional government, academia, industry, and environmental NGOs. Considerable difficulties exist for SCEPs in Russia, however, and prominent among these are (1) a rigidly vertical civil service structure, with separate organs having responsibility for different natural resources, persisting from Soviet times, which hinders effective intergrated and holistic environmental management; and (2) a lack of open access to environmental information from military and quasi-military sites.
Keywords:: Russia  Siberia  Tomsk  Management  Radioactivity
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