INTRODUCTION
Over the last decade, market-based incentives have become the regulatory tool of choice when trying to solve difficult environmental problems. They are widely viewed as more efficient than traditional command and control regulation. This collection of essays takes a critical look at this question, evaluates whether the promises of market-based regulation have been fulfilled, and recommends future research that no longer pits one kind of approach against the other, but instead examines their interaction and compatibility.
This book had its genesis in conversations that took place over a period of months in 2002, conversations that were helped along by fine Santa Barbara County wine. Our topic was environmental regulationโin particular the long-standing debate over command and control versus market-based environmental regulationโand our discussions made us wonder: How could two scholarsโone of us an economist, the other a lawyerโbe so concerned about the same problem yet have such different perspectives? The literatures we drew on seemed to have little in common, and our normative frameworks seemed like ships passing in the night. Were we typical? In what ways did economists think about these regulatory design issues differently than legal scholars? Beyond the differences in approach, what did each field actually know? Now that we had some experience with market-based regulations, what did the experience tell us? In particular, if we could draw on the most interesting and recent work in both fields, what would it tell us about how well market instruments had performed, relative to prescriptive regulation, to date? To answer these questions, we invited some of the brightest minds concerned with environmental regulation, from both economics and law, to prepare papers and convene for a focused one-day workshop in Santa Barbara in August 2003. Our hope was that the whole emerging from such a dialogue would be much more than the sum of the two disciplinary parts.
The result was quite remarkable. Over the course of the very long day, the intensity never waned. The conversation was relentlessly interesting and truly cross-disciplinary. There were fascinating moments of translation and synergy, agreement and disagreement. The interchange frequently surprised the group and led to questions and issues we had not . . .
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The research project titled "Investigating the Impact of Microplastics on Marine Ecosystems" aims to delve into the growing concern surrounding the pr...
The research project titled "Investigating the impact of microplastics on marine ecosystems: A case study of a coastal region" aims to delve into the ...
The project topic, "The Impact of Climate Change on Biodiversity in Tropical Rainforests," delves into the critical issue of how climate change is aff...
Plastic pollution is a pressing environmental issue that has far-reaching consequences on marine ecosystems and biodiversity worldwide. The excessive use and im...
The research project titled "Assessment of Microplastic Pollution in Freshwater Ecosystems: Impacts and Solutions" aims to investigate the presence, d...
The research project titled "Assessment of Microplastic Pollution in Coastal Ecosystems" aims to investigate the presence and impact of microplastic p...
The research project titled "Investigating the Impact of Microplastics on Marine Ecosystems" aims to delve into the critical issue of microplastic pol...
The research project titled "Assessment of microplastic pollution in freshwater ecosystems: Impacts and mitigation strategies" focuses on investigatin...
Plastic pollution has become a significant environmental issue worldwide, particularly in coastal areas where marine ecosystems are highly vulnerable. This rese...