Environmental Planning

Hardback

Environmental Planning

9781847208637 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh, ICREA Professor, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain and Professor of Environmental and Resource Economics, Free University, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, Kenneth Button, University Professor, Schar School of Policy and Government, George Mason University, US and Peter Nijkamp, Professor Emeritus, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands, the Centre for European Studies, Universitatea Alexandru Ioan Cuza din Iasi, Romania and the School of Public Policy and Management, Tsinghua University, China
Publication Date: 2007 ISBN: 978 1 84720 863 7 Extent: 672 pp
This insightful volume presents a multidisciplinary perspective on environmental planning. Drawing on the most important works in the environmental and social sciences, this collection places special emphasis on spatial dimensions and pure planning and covers such topics as: regulatory instruments and institutions; policy under bounded rationality; urban environmental planning; regulation of diffuse sources and land; location and trade and ex post evaluation planning. In addition to many classic papers, the editor has included some recent surveys and papers which offer an original viewpoint. The book will be an essential source of reference for scholars and practitioners alike.

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Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
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This insightful volume presents a multidisciplinary perspective on environmental planning. Drawing on the most important works in the environmental and social sciences, this collection places special emphasis on spatial dimensions and pure planning and covers such topics as: regulatory instruments and institutions; policy under bounded rationality; urban environmental planning; regulation of diffuse sources and land; location and trade and ex-post evaluation planning. In addition to many classic papers, the editor has included some recent surveys and papers which offer an original viewpoint. The book will be an essential source of reference for scholars and practitioners alike.
Critical Acclaim
‘This volume combines the traditional classics in environmental and resource economics with more recent classics in ecological economics and related fields to define environmental planning in a modern light. It will help researchers judge for themselves how much the field has evolved over the past 40 years. Experts will benefit from having the many important works at their fingertips, while new scholars will benefit from having leading authorities in the field identify an excellent path toward understanding it.’
– Adam Rose, University of California, US

‘This unique collection of papers represents an excellent resource for both teachers and professionals in the environmental planning field.’
– R. Kerry Turner, University of East Anglia, UK
Contributors
39 articles, dating from 1963 to 2005
Contributors include: W.J. Baumol, C.W. Clark, H.E. Daly, D. Fullerton, J.T. Hamilton, J.M. Harris, D.M. Newbery, W.E. Oates, D.I. Stern, R. Turvey
Contents
Contents:

Acknowledgements

Series Preface Kenneth Button and Peter Nijkamp

Introduction Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh, Kenneth J. Button and Peter Nijkamp

PART I FOUNDATIONS
1. Ralph Turvey (1963), ‘On Divergences Between Social Cost and Private Cost’
2. Colin W. Clark (1973), ‘The Economics of Overexploitation’
3. Herman E. Daly (1992), ‘Allocation, Distribution, and Scale: Towards an Economics that is Efficient, Just, and Sustainable’
4. Silvio O. Funtowicz and Jerome R. Ravetz (1993), ‘Science for the Post-Normal Age’
5. Dustin J. Penn (2003), ‘The Evolutionary Roots of our Environmental Problems: Towards a Darwinian Ecology’
6. W.J. Mitsch and S.E. Jørgensen (2003), ‘Ecological Engineering: A Field Whose Time Has Come’

PART II REGULATORY INSTRUMENTS AND INSTITUTIONS
7. J.H. Dales (1968), ‘Land, Water, and Ownership’
8. William J. Baumol and Wallace E. Oates (1971), ‘The Use of Standards and Prices for Protection of the Environment’
9. Michiel J.F. van Pelt, Arie Kuyvenhoven and Peter Nijkamp (1990), ‘Project Appraisal and Sustainability: Methodological Challenges’
10. Jonathan M. Harris (1991), ‘Global Institutions and Ecological Crisis’
11. Paul Slovic, James H. Flynn and Mark Layman (1991), ‘Perceived Risk, Trust, and the Politics of Nuclear Waste’
12. Clifford S. Russell and Philip T. Powell (1999), ‘Practical Considerations and Comparison of Instruments of Environmental Policy’
13. Adam Rose and Snorre Kverndokk (1999), ‘Equity in Environmental Policy with an Application to Global Warming’
14. Adam B. Jaffe, Richard G. Newell and Robert N. Stavins (2002), ‘Environmental Policy and Technological Change’

PART III POLICY UNDER BOUNDED RATIONALITY
15. Arild Vatn and Daniel W. Bromley (1994), ‘Choices Without Prices Without Apologies’
16. Richard B. Howarth (1996), ‘Status Effects and Environmental Externalities’
17. David I. Stern (1997), ‘Limits to Substitution and Irreversibility in Production and Consumption: A Neoclassical Interpretation of Ecological Economics’
18. Elinor Ostrom (2000), ‘Collective Action and the Evolution of Social Norms’
19. Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh, Ada Ferrer-i-Carbonell and Giuseppe Munda (2000), ‘Alternative Models of Individual Behaviour and Implications for Environmental Policy’

PART IV URBAN ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING
20. K.G. Willis and M.C. Whitby (1985), ‘The Value of Green Belt Land’
21. Ellen M. Brennan and Harry W. Richardson (1989), ‘Asian Megacity Characteristics, Problems, and Policies’, International Regional Science Review, 12 (2), 117-29 [13]
22. Scott Campbell (1996), ‘Green Cities, Growing Cities, Just Cities? Urban Planning and the Contradictions of Sustainable Development’
23. Stephen M. Wheeler (2000), ‘Planning for Metropolitan Sustainability’

PART V REGULATION OF DIFFUSE SOURCES AND LAND
24. David M. Newbery (1988), ‘Road User Charges in Britain’
25. John B. Braden, Gary V. Johnson, Aziz Bouzaher and David Miltz (1989), ‘Optimal Spatial Management of Agricultural Pollution’
26. Kenneth Button (1990), ‘Environmental Externalities and Transport Policy’
27. Jeffrey P. Cohen and Cletus C. Coughlin (2005), ‘An Introduction to Two-Rate Taxation of Land and Buildings’

PART VI LOCATION AND TRADE
28. Herman Daly and Robert Goodland (1994), ‘An Ecological-Economic Assessment of Deregulation of International Commerce under GATT’
29. Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh and Harmen Verbruggen (1999), ‘Spatial Sustainability, Trade and Indicators: An Evaluation of the “Ecological Footprint”’
30. Smita B. Brunnermeier and Arik Levinson (2004), ‘Examining the Evidence on Environmental Regulations and Industry Location’

PART VII FRAGMENTATION, IRREVERSIBILITY AND RESILIENCE
31. John V. Krutilla (1967), ‘Conservation Reconsidered’
32. Richard C. Bishop (1978), ‘Endangered Species and Uncertainty: The Economics of a Safe Minimum Standard’
33. Janice M. Lord and David A. Norton (1990), ‘Scale and the Spatial Concept of Fragmentation’
34. Simon A. Levin, Scott Barrett, Sara Aniyar, William Baumol, Christopher Bliss, Bert Bolin, Partha Dasgupta, Paul Ehrlich, Carl Folke, Ing-Marie Gren, C.S. Holling, Annmari Jansson, Bengt-Owe Jansson, Karl-Göran Mäler, Dan Martin, Charles Perrings and Eytan Sheshinski (1998), ‘Resilience in Natural and Socioeconomic Systems’

PART VIII EX POST EVALUATION OF PLANNING
35. Roger D. Congleton (1992), ‘Political Institutions and Pollution Control’
36. James T. Hamilton (1995), ‘Testing for Environmental Racism – Prejudice, Profits, Political Power?’
37. James Hamilton and W. Kip Viscusi (1999), ‘Are Risk Regulators Rational? Evidence from Hazardous Waste Cleanup Decisions’
38. Marcus B. Lane (2003), ‘Participation, Decentralization, and Civil Society: Indigenous Rights and Democracy in Environmental Planning’

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