Description
Book SynopsisFormulating effective environmental policies requires attention to a range of political, scientific, management, and moral issues. This work integrates these facets to develop a framework for analyzing and improving environmental policy. It discusses New York City's garbage crisis, the problem of leaks from underground storage units, and more.
Trade ReviewCollege-level students of environmental science...[and] political science students - especially those working on the global scale - will also find it invaluable. Midwest Book Review Cohen proposes a conceptual framework for policy analysis that explicitly looks at values, political concerns, science and technology aspects, policy design and economic issues, and operational management...It would be a good choice for a (multidisciplinary) graduate seminar. Choice Those working within the field may benefit from its big picture approach to diagnosing several environmental ills...consistent emphasis upon the role of environmental values in policy analysis and development should be commended. -- Steve Vanderheiden Environmental Ethics
Table of ContentsPreface Acknowledgments Part I. Developing a Framework 1. Understanding Environmental Policy 2. A Framework for Understanding Environmental Policy Part II. Applying the Framework 3. Why New York City Can't Take Out the Garbage 4. Why Companies Let Valuable Gasoline Leak Out of Underground Tanks 5. Have We Learned How to Clean Up Toxic Waste Sites, and Can We Afford It? 6. Have We Made the Planet Warmer, and If We Have, How Can We Stop? Part III. Critiquing the Framework 7. What Have We Learned from the Framework About Environmental Problems, and What Else Do We Need to Know? 8. Conclusions: Improving Environmental Policy References Index