-
Member Login
- Home
- About
- Institute Groups
- Membership
- Events
- News & Publications
- Institute Programs
- Resources
- Jobs Board
- Contact Us
- Site Info
This comprehensive training programme equips practitioners with the skills to deliver meaningful community engagement in impact assessment. Through examining 13 foundational elements that underpin effective public participation, participants will gain practical insights into planning and delivering engagement that goes beyond consultation to create genuine collaboration. The programme combines extensive research with real-world application, allowing participants to work with their own case studies whilst applying recognised industry frameworks from EIANZ, IAIA, and IAP2.
Delivered in a highly interactive learning environment, this training addresses the contemporary challenges facing engagement practitioners today. Participants will explore proven tools and techniques for achieving sustainable outcomes, with particular focus on managing high-conflict situations and addressing misinformation. The programme also examines the evolving influence of artificial intelligence on engagement practices, ensuring participants are prepared for the future of public participation in impact assessment.
Session 1 – What makes for ‘meaningful’ public participation in impact assessment?
Session 2 – When, where and how to engage for effective approaches
Session 3 – Applying the elements, social skills/communications, technique selection
Session 4 – project management fundamentals, ethics, monitoring and evaluation
By completing this course attendees will learn to:
Note: These workshops will be held for the first time in September 2025, and thereafter depending on demand. If you are unable to register for the current advertised workshop, email office@eianz.org and ask to be put on the wait list to ensure you have the first opportunity to register for the following workshop.
Tanya Burdett | Director at Essential Planning and Engagement
Fellow of the Planning Institute of Australia (PIA), Registered Planner, and Licensed Trainer in delivery of the Global Learning Pathway with the International Association of Public Participation (IAP2), Tanya shares insights from her 30+ year career in planning, impact assessment and public participation. She co-chairs the IAIA public participation section, is active in the EIANZ SEA Community of Practice, and has contributed to multiple books on the role of engagement in impact assessment and planning approvals, releasing her first co-edited book in 2024 (Handbook of Public Participation in Impact Assessment).
Tanya has worked in a range of sectors, and maintains a consultancy practice in both Australia and the UK – Essential Planning, with extensive training, capacity building and impact assessment experience in both countries and elsewhere in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, and the Asia-Pacific region. She has taught on community engagement and impact assessment at the University of Westminster (London, UK) and Monash University (Melbourne, Australia), and is a sessional tutor at the University of Melbourne in Masters courses on urban sustainability and climate change, participatory planning, and strategic plan making. She is completing her PhD at the University of Melbourne, with research interests in strategic decision making, impact assessment and engagement.
Click here to view Tanya’s website and biography →
Consider joining as a student, associate or full member today! To receive the member rate to the symposium make sure you apply for membership prior to registering for the event! Join here →

When: Tues 9 Sept, Thurs 11 Sept, Tues 16 Sept & Thurs 18 Sept 2025 from 10:00am to 1:30pm (AEST)
Where:
Zoom meeting
Your computer!
Cost: $495 EIANZ members, $575 non-members (AUD)
Places Available: 12
Contact: Registration and event enquiries to office@eianz.org or phone us on +61 8593 4140 or +64 9887 6972
We acknowledge and value the rights and interests of Indigenous Peoples in the protection and management of environmental values through their involvement in decisions and processes, and the application of traditional Indigenous knowledge.