A01=Terry L. Anderson
acid rain
Author_Terry L. Anderson
Blowout Preventers
Bobwhite Quail
Category=JP
Central Arizona Project
Colorado Water Conservation Board
Conservation Reserve Program
Effluent Charges
Energy Resources
environmental policy analysis
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
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Free Market Environmentalism
global warming
Good Resource Stewardship
Grizzly Bear Habitat
Instream Flow Rights
Instream Flows
Lower Fox River
market-based environmental solutions
Mule Deer
ocean fisheries
outdoor recreation
Place Specific Information
Potential Damage Costs
Prior Appropriation Doctrine
property rights theory
public land management
Public Trust Doctrine
Rectangular Survey System
regulatory incentives
resource economics
Ruffed Grouse
Timber Famine
Tradeable Pollution Permits
water resource allocation
Wild Duck
Wildest Rivers
Yellowstone Bison
Product details
- ISBN 9780367013127
- Weight: 540g
- Dimensions: 147 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 23 May 2019
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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Although there is in the United States a clear national consensus supporting the protection of the environment, advocates often profoundly disagree about the policies best designed to achieve this end. The traditional answer has been that government must intervene, through legislation and regulation of behavior, to preserve environmental values. This book takes a different approach, examining the prospects (and pitfalls) for improving natural resource allocation and environmental quality through market processes. The authors demonstrate that governmental policies often exacerbate environmental problems because of inadequate incentives and information. A property rights approach that focuses on the costs of operating markets as well as governments lays the framework for thinking about problems ranging from the American Frontier to global warming. Property rights solutions that encourage market processes are proposed for public land management, outdoor recreation, water quantity and quality, and ocean fisheries. The final chapter tackles the “tougher problems” of global warming and acid rain. Free Market Environmentalism applies the economic way of thinking to environmental problems of growing importance. It will be appropriate for environmental economic courses, but an economics background is not a prerequisite for understanding this nontechnical, innovative approach to natural resource management.
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