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Making the Environment Count

Selected Essays of Alan Randall

9781840640861 Edward Elgar Publishing
Alan Randall, The Ohio State University, US and The University of Sydney, Australia
Publication Date: 1999 ISBN: 978 1 84064 086 1 Extent: 256 pp
Making the Environment Count brings together, in one accessible volume, an outstanding selection of Alan Randall’s essays published over the past 30 years. It explores ideas on making the environment count from a conceptual perspective and addresses a range of topics pertinent to the study of environmental economics including:

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Contents
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Making the Environment Count brings together, in one accessible volume, an outstanding selection of Alan Randall’s essays published over the past 30 years. It explores ideas on making the environment count from a conceptual perspective and addresses a range of topics pertinent to the study of environmental economics including:

• the limits of markets in reflecting environmental quality, and the implications of this for policy and institutional design
• cost–benefit analysis, with emphasis on its welfare-theoretic foundations, and its ability to reflect the public’s demand for environmental quality
• conservation, biodiversity and sustainability
• developments in methodology
• the ethical foundations of public policy
• conceptual foundations of empirical methods of valuing the environment

By improving access to Alan Randall’s many important contributions, this volume makes a significant addition to the literature and will be welcomed by environmental economists.
Contents
Contents: Introduction Part I: Market Failure Part II: Benefit Cost Analysis Part III: Sustainability and Biodiversity Part IV: Methodology Index
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