Political Economy of Environmental Protection: Analysis and Evidence
Political Economy of Environmental Protection: Analysis and Evidence
edited by Roger D. Congleton
University of Michigan Press, 1996 Cloth: 978-0-472-10602-8 | eISBN: 978-0-472-22460-9 (standard) Library of Congress Classification HC79.E5P656 1996 Dewey Decimal Classification 333.7
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Underlying all the contributions to this volume is the understanding that both political and economic considerations affect environmental outcomes. Political decisions largely determine the feasible uses of natural resources by defining and enforcing fundamental property rights and entitlements over matters with environmental consequences. By determining the rules of the game, political decisions determine the extent to which humanity is empowered to transform the world, the processes used, and the waste products remaining. Environmental policies and thereby environmental outcomes emerge from a complex political process that accommodates a variety of conflicting interests. The essays in this volume examine the links between politics and economic interdependencies, using the modern tools of economics and public choice. Each essay develops a balanced and generally positive analysis of a particular environmental policy area ranging from international treaties on global warming to EPA regulations regarding pesticide usage. Contributors use a variety of mathematical and statistical methods to examine policy formation in such policy areas as global warming, wildlife management, undersea oil rights, and the location of NIMBYs. The volume will be of interest to those who study environmental policy from the perspectives of economics, political science, public policy, and environmental studies.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Roger D. Congleton is Professor of Economics and Senior Research Associate, Center for Study of Public Choice, George Mason University. He had previously been a visiting Professor of Economics at the Stockholm School of Economics and a visiting Research Fellow at Australian National University. He has lectured on political and economic aspects of environmental protection at many universities and academic meetings around the world, including ones in Japan, Australia, Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Denmark.
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