Environmental Economics: Policies for Environmental Management and Sustainable Development

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Edward Elgar, 1993 - Business & Economics - 259 pages
Environmental Economics provides an accessible well written guide to appropriate policies for environmental management and sustainable development.

Following a general introduction the book begins with a discussion of externalities (Paretian relevant and irrelevant, Coasian considerations) and microeconomic policies to control pollution and environmental spillovers and degradation from economic activities. Methods and problems involved in allowing for environmental risk and uncertainty in project evaluation and the impact of the law on environmental risk-taking are examined. A major theme is sustainability - its nature, its implications for cost-benefit analysis and project evaluation and its consequences for policies for economic development. In conclusion, global conservation issues, such as proposed world conservation strategies, and policies for controlling global pollution eg. greenhouse gas emissions, are examined.

Written in a lively and accessible style, the book will be of particular interest to policy makers, teachers and students of environmental economics.

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Contents

necessary to increase or maintain the output of manmade
9
Relevant and Irrelevant
21
Allowing
35
Copyright

14 other sections not shown

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About the author (1993)

The late Clem Tisdell, formerly Professor Emeritus, School of Economics, The University of Queensland, Australia

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