Lexington Books
Pages: 248
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-1961-7 • Hardback • April 2008 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
978-0-7391-1962-4 • Paperback • August 2009 • $50.99 • (£39.00)
Robert J. McMonagle is associate professor of political science at Neumann University in Pennsylvania.
Chapter 1 Table of Contents
Chapter 2 Figures
Chapter 3 Tables
Chapter 4 List of Abbreviations
Chapter 5 Preface
Chapter 6 Acknowledgments
Chapter 7 1 Introduction: Rethinking Environmental-Energy Policy Studies
Chapter 8 2 The Case of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR): A History
Chapter 9 3 Advance to Go: The ANWR Policy Monopoly Unravels
Chapter 10 4 "Civility" in Washington? Party Politics in Environmental-Energy Policy Making
Chapter 11 5 Forces for Change: Political and Social Currents for ANWR, Western Lands, the Gulf of Mexico, and Cape Cod Wind Farms
Chapter 12 6 Patterns of Decisions across the Environment-Energy Divide
Chapter 13 Methodological Appendix
Chapter 14 Bibliography
Chapter 15 Index
McMonagle tackles a challenging question in this thoroughly researched study: How do we best explain the long and contentious political struggle over drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge? Understanding the partisan, ideological, and institutional roots of the fight over ANWR offers a window into understanding all instances where policymakers and attentive publics struggle to balance the equally desired goals of energy production and environmental protection. The result is a careful, theoretically rich, empirically informed, and policy-relevant effort to make sense of these dilemmas and, in the process, find ways to get beyond them.
— Christopher J. Bosso, author ofEnvironment, Inc. andPesticides and Politics
Caribou and Conoco is the first of its kind of analysis of the ANWR (drilling vs. environmental protection) issue. This well-researched and detailed work examines how drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge was pushed onto the national agenda in the 1990s, periodically resurfacing and seemingly decided in favor of environmental protection. Looking at ANWR, and extending the analysis onto other environmental policy issues (oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, drilling on public lands, and windfarms off the coast of Massachusetts), Robert McMonagle cogently explains environmental policy change while encouraging political scientists to become more active in public deliberations on the environment. This book is a must-read for students of public policy and the environment.
— Kyle Kreider, author ofVoting in America: A Documentary and Reference Guide
Robert McMonagle guides us carefully and thoroughly through the long-running Arctic National Wildlife Refuge policy debate, helping us understand how and why Congressional, media, and public framing of ANWR issues have shifted that debate over the past couple decades. His lucid analysis of one of the defining environmental issues of our time is essential reading for academicians and practitioners. McMonagle's methodology and findings are applicable to a great variety of ecological, social, public health, and other pressing policy debates.
— Robert J. Mason, author ofCollaborative Land Use Management: The Quieter Revolution in Place-Based Planning