The Morning After Earth Day: Practical Environmental Politics

Front Cover
Brookings Institution Press, Dec 1, 2010 - Political Science - 153 pages

As we approach the 30th anniversary of Earth Day (the first of its kind was April 1970), congressional debate about environmental protection often remains paralyzed and polarized. But across the country, environmental pragmatism is gaining ground. The Morning after Earth Day explores how policymakers, business executives, and citizen groups are fighting novel political battles and sometimes making peace with surprising compromises. After a generation of progress in reducing large sources of industrial and municipal pollution and in improving management of public lands, today's environmental conflicts are more complex. They involve controlling pollution caused by farmers, small businesses, drivers of aging cars, and homeowners, as well as minimizing ecological threats on private land. Remedies often lie in politically treacherous territory--persuading ordinary people to change their daily routines rather than ordering big business to adopt new technology or government officials to manage land differently. As Mary Graham shows, practical approaches are resolving immediate disputes and providing clues for future policy. But core dilemmas remain. They include how to reconcile environmental protection with respect for private property, how to balance federal and state authority, and how much to rely on behavioral versus technological change. Only by reclaiming the debate about these dilemmas from extremists and confronting them head-on will the nation build a solid foundation for the next generation of environmental policy. Copublished with the Governance Institute

 

Selected pages

Contents

We Have Seen the Enemy and It Is Us
12
Yesterdays Agenda and Where It Came From
27
Todays Puzzling Paradoxes
51
The New Environmental Politics
90
Turning Point or Stalemate?
111
Notes
119
Index
143
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page v - Its principal purposes are to aid in the development of sound public policies and to promote public understanding of issues of national importance. The...
Page 3 - The nation's concern with the environment has done what George Wallace was unable to do: Distract the nation from the human problems of the black and brown Americans, living in just as much misery as ever," Mayor Richard Hatcher of Gary, Indiana, said.
Page x - General for the Environment and Natural Resources Division of the US Department of Justice.

About the author (2010)

Mary Graham, a visiting fellow in Governance Studies at the Brookings Institution, is codirector of the Transparency Policy Project at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and president of the Governance Institute in Washington, D.C. She is the author of The Morning After Earth Day (Brookings/Governance Institute, 1999).

Bibliographic information