Environmental Policy
Transnational Issues and National Trends
- 256 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
This edited collection provides a cross-sectional review of environmental legislation and administration in the United States, with comparative chapters relating to Canada and New Zealand. The experts look at a variety of environmental issues that create policy problems, and while the book offers no blueprint or prognosis of environmental policy in the twenty-first century, it does offer insights into trends that will influence the future shape of that policy. The book is prefaced by an overview of the environment as a problem for policy by Lynton K. Caldwell, who has been credited with inventing the term environmental policy. Experts examine the role of risk analysis in policy making; the transnational issues associated with NAFTA and GATT are discussed; and the efforts of the Environmental Protection Agency to integrate policy and administration are described. The perspective of the authors is transnational, with several chapters focusing primarily on U.S. policy.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Environment as a Problem for Policy
- 2 Progressive Ratcheting of Environmental Law: Implications for Public Management
- 3 Rethinking the Role of Risk Assessment in Environmental Policymaking
- 4 The NAFTA and the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation
- 5 World Trade, the GATT, and the Environment
- 6 Policy Regimes for International Waste Trade
- 7 Boundary Issues and Canadian Environmental Legislation
- 8 Integrated Impact Assessment: The New Zealand Experiment
- 9 Prospects for Integrated Environmental Policy
- 10 International Opinion at the Centuryâs End: Public Attitudes Toward Environmental Issues
- Index
- About the Contributors