Hardback
Governing the Environment
Salient Institutional Issues
9781847203977 Edward Elgar Publishing
Environmental policy, focusing on the control of pollution and on over-exploitation, easily overlooks the extensive range of interconnections between economic activities and natural systems. In this timely book, a number of specialists examine how crucial aspects of complex environmental problems and policy can be dealt with in decentralized governmental systems.
More Information
Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
More Information
Environmental policy, focusing on the control of pollution and on over-exploitation, easily overlooks the extensive range of interconnections between economic activities and natural systems. In this timely book, a number of specialists examine how crucial aspects of complex environmental problems and policy can be dealt with in decentralized governmental systems.
Bridging the gap between the conventional environmental federalism literature and advances in environmental and ecological economics that have been made over the last two decades, this innovative book explores alternative solutions to the problem of assigning powers over the environment. It deals with important issues in environmental governance including interjurisdictional contracting, discounting, risk management, eliciting compliance, and environmental accounting – in each case concentrating on the comparative advantage of governments at different jurisdictional levels in implementing optimal policies.
Offering a comprehensive approach to environmental policy, this book will be a valuable resource for researchers and students in environmental economics, environmental politics, governance and decentralization. It will also benefit practitioners and policy-makers with responsibilities over the environment.
Bridging the gap between the conventional environmental federalism literature and advances in environmental and ecological economics that have been made over the last two decades, this innovative book explores alternative solutions to the problem of assigning powers over the environment. It deals with important issues in environmental governance including interjurisdictional contracting, discounting, risk management, eliciting compliance, and environmental accounting – in each case concentrating on the comparative advantage of governments at different jurisdictional levels in implementing optimal policies.
Offering a comprehensive approach to environmental policy, this book will be a valuable resource for researchers and students in environmental economics, environmental politics, governance and decentralization. It will also benefit practitioners and policy-makers with responsibilities over the environment.
Critical Acclaim
‘This volume – the second by this editorial team – addresses many of the issues to be resolved if we are to manage environmental public goods efficiently and sustainably. What is the right scale of governance? What makes for effective public–private partnership? What makes governance systems effective? When do we need supranational governance? Given the complex nature of social-ecological systems these are hard questions. Breton and his collaborators answer them in ways that are both convincing and insightful. A very valuable contribution.’
– Charles Perrings, Arizona State University, US
– Charles Perrings, Arizona State University, US
Contributors
Contributors: A. Breton, G. Brosio, S. Dalmazzone, M.G. Faure, G. Garrone, J.S. Johnston, A. La Notte, S. Lumley, E. Ostrom, P. Salmon, A. Scott, J.F. Shogren, M. Valiante, K.T. van ''t Veld
Contents
Contents:
Preface
1. Introduction
Albert Breton, Giorgio Brosio, Silvana Dalmazzone and Giovanna Garrone
PART I: INSTITUTIONS: ALTERNATIVE SOLUTIONS TO THE PROBLEM OF ASSIGNING POWERS OVER THE ENVIRONMENT
2. Contracts in the Vertical Assignment of Powers Over the Environment
Anthony Scott
3. Privatization and Environmental Governance
Marcia Valiante
4. The Contribution of Community Institutions to Environmental Problem-Solving
Elinor Ostrom
5. Bicameralism and Environmental Legislation
Giorgio Brosio
6. Fashioning Entitlements: A Comparative Law and Economic Analysis of the Judicial Role in Environmental Centralization in the United States and Europe
Jason Scott Johnston and Michael G. Faure
7. Compliance in Decentralized Environmental Governance
Albert Breton and Pierre Salmon
PART II: ISSUES IN ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE: THE COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE OF DIFFERENT LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT
8. Environmental Federalism with Regards to Accidental Pollution
Klaas T. van ’t Veld and Jason F. Shogren
9. Losing the Lands of Plenty? Time Scale and Discounting in Environmental Governance
Sarah Lumley
10. Environmental Accounting at Different Levels of Government: The State of the Art
Silvana Dalmazzone and Alessandra La Notte
Index
Preface
1. Introduction
Albert Breton, Giorgio Brosio, Silvana Dalmazzone and Giovanna Garrone
PART I: INSTITUTIONS: ALTERNATIVE SOLUTIONS TO THE PROBLEM OF ASSIGNING POWERS OVER THE ENVIRONMENT
2. Contracts in the Vertical Assignment of Powers Over the Environment
Anthony Scott
3. Privatization and Environmental Governance
Marcia Valiante
4. The Contribution of Community Institutions to Environmental Problem-Solving
Elinor Ostrom
5. Bicameralism and Environmental Legislation
Giorgio Brosio
6. Fashioning Entitlements: A Comparative Law and Economic Analysis of the Judicial Role in Environmental Centralization in the United States and Europe
Jason Scott Johnston and Michael G. Faure
7. Compliance in Decentralized Environmental Governance
Albert Breton and Pierre Salmon
PART II: ISSUES IN ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE: THE COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE OF DIFFERENT LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT
8. Environmental Federalism with Regards to Accidental Pollution
Klaas T. van ’t Veld and Jason F. Shogren
9. Losing the Lands of Plenty? Time Scale and Discounting in Environmental Governance
Sarah Lumley
10. Environmental Accounting at Different Levels of Government: The State of the Art
Silvana Dalmazzone and Alessandra La Notte
Index