Description

Book Synopsis
Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer explores three generic difficulties plaguing efforts to reduce health risks and sets out a proposal for a new administrative entity to develop a coherent regulatory system adaptable for use in different risk-related programs—a mission-oriented, independent agency commanding significant prestige and authority.

Trade Review
Reads like one of those intellectually exciting lectures for which some professors become so well known that their courses are fittingly oversubscribed every year. The style is clear and the analysis is dotted with the kind of provocative questions at the heart of this debate: how much regulation is enough, how much is too much, and the ultimate question, what is the dollar value of a life? -- Neil A. Lewis * New York Times Book Review *
An eloquent meditation on how to regulate perilous activities in a world that cannot afford to reduce risk to zero. -- Peter Passell * New York Times *
Breyer takes the reader by the hand through what he calls a ‘vicious circle’ of skewed public perception, congressional reaction, and scientific uncertainty to show why the U.S. has been unable to balance the cost of regulating substances with the benefit of protecting the public… Breyer’s book gives the public an understandable introduction to the complexity of regulating health risks. -- Mary Beth Regan * Businessweek *
One of the more trenchant proposals yet for what might constitute the next leg on the endless journey toward legislative reform… A clear and thoughtful meditation on how to build a better government, by taking the nature of the press, politics and scientific knowledge into account. -- David Warsh * Boston Sunday Globe *
[Breyer’s] discussion of the inconsistencies in our current approach to environmental regulation is a tour de force, confidently integrating science and policy in terms easily accessible to the intelligent layman… Breyer’s analysis surely can illuminate. -- Stephen F. Williams * Michigan Law Review *

Table of Contents
Preface 1. Systematic Problems 2. Cause: The Vicious Circle 3. Solutions Notes Index

Breaking the Vicious Circle

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    A Paperback / softback by Stephen Breyer


      View other formats and editions of Breaking the Vicious Circle by Stephen Breyer

      Publisher: Harvard University Press
      Publication Date: 17/01/2006
      ISBN13: 9780674081154, 978-0674081154
      ISBN10: 0674081153

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer explores three generic difficulties plaguing efforts to reduce health risks and sets out a proposal for a new administrative entity to develop a coherent regulatory system adaptable for use in different risk-related programs—a mission-oriented, independent agency commanding significant prestige and authority.

      Trade Review
      Reads like one of those intellectually exciting lectures for which some professors become so well known that their courses are fittingly oversubscribed every year. The style is clear and the analysis is dotted with the kind of provocative questions at the heart of this debate: how much regulation is enough, how much is too much, and the ultimate question, what is the dollar value of a life? -- Neil A. Lewis * New York Times Book Review *
      An eloquent meditation on how to regulate perilous activities in a world that cannot afford to reduce risk to zero. -- Peter Passell * New York Times *
      Breyer takes the reader by the hand through what he calls a ‘vicious circle’ of skewed public perception, congressional reaction, and scientific uncertainty to show why the U.S. has been unable to balance the cost of regulating substances with the benefit of protecting the public… Breyer’s book gives the public an understandable introduction to the complexity of regulating health risks. -- Mary Beth Regan * Businessweek *
      One of the more trenchant proposals yet for what might constitute the next leg on the endless journey toward legislative reform… A clear and thoughtful meditation on how to build a better government, by taking the nature of the press, politics and scientific knowledge into account. -- David Warsh * Boston Sunday Globe *
      [Breyer’s] discussion of the inconsistencies in our current approach to environmental regulation is a tour de force, confidently integrating science and policy in terms easily accessible to the intelligent layman… Breyer’s analysis surely can illuminate. -- Stephen F. Williams * Michigan Law Review *

      Table of Contents
      Preface 1. Systematic Problems 2. Cause: The Vicious Circle 3. Solutions Notes Index

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