Equity and Property Allocation in Market-Based Environmental Policy
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Köp båda 2 för 855 kr'Evinces a deep grasp of the legal and philosophical issues . . . and offers a nice conceptual framework within which the discussion of property arrangements and public policy is grounded.' Daniel W. Bromley, University of Wisconsin-Madison '[This book demonstrates] how well-accepted principles of fairness and distributive justice have guided politicians in allocating private rights to public resources newly created by market-based programs. . . . An excellent book for classroom use and professional development.' Rangelands
Leigh Raymond is an assistant professor of political science at Purdue University. His articles about property rights, localism, and environmental policy have appeared in Ecology Law Quarterly, Natural Resources Journal, Policy Sciences, and Science.
Introduction: Equity Norms in Environmental Policy 1. Licensed Property and Alternatives to the 'Gavel Theory' of Fairness in Public Policy 2. A Property Theory Framework 3. The Present: SO2 Emission Allowances, 1989-2002 4. The Past: Public Lands Grazing, 1934-1938 5. The Future: Allocating 'Extra-National' Resources 6. Conclusion: The Case for Equity Revisited Bibliography