Bog'liq environment-pollution-development-the-case-of-uzbekistan
participate at the initial stage of defining the problem
and identifying the possible alternatives. Participation
facilitates responsibility and motivates people to make their
contribution towards the implementation of the adopted
decision. Besides, participation claims the participants’
time and interest, openness of the institution involved and,
as a rule, more time and funds than the accurate hierarchic
decision-making. The chosen procedure may pose a risk that
the decision may not comply with the experts’ opinion, while
the principle of participation commands respect for diverse
interests and opinions.
Although there are various basic principles of sustainable
development, their application adds a practical dimension to
adopting responsible decisions concerning economy, policy and
environ mental protection.
Assessing the implementation of sustainable development, the
issue of using the concept of sustainable development in countries
with different economic and social regimes is particularly
important. Up to now, the most extensive research pertains
to the perspectives of sustainable development in industrially
developed countries. Although the number of such countries
is relatively small, their complying with the basic principles
of sustainable development is particularly topical due to the
high level of consumption which, in interaction with the free
market economy and globalisation processes, is, in fact, one of
the principal causes of global environ mental and development
problems. At the same time, precisely the industrially developed
countries display the understanding of the necessity of sustainable
development. A strategically important trend of sustainable
development in industrially developed countries is the concept
of dematerialisation – decoupling economic development from
material consumption or ensuring the growth of well-being against
the background of diminished needs of material consumption and
use of resources. The situation in industrially developed countries
is considerably different from the situation, for example, in Africa,
most of Asia, in South America as well as in many European
countries. The people’s desire to reach the level of welfare
of industrially developed countries as fast as possible makes
the necessity to decouple economic development and material
consumption even more topical. Even so, sustainable development
issues in the developing countries are related to the solution of
the problems caused by the backlash of free market economy and
globalisation, which cannot be solved locally.