Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 160
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7425-1084-5 • Hardback • May 2001 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-0-7425-1085-2 • Paperback • May 2001 • $47.00 • (£36.00)
978-0-7425-7538-7 • eBook • May 2001 • $44.50 • (£34.00)
George A. Gonzalez is assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Miami at Coral Gables, and coeditor of Flashpoints in Environmental Policymaking: Controversies in Achieving Sustainability.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 The Policymaking Process
Chapter 3 "Practical" Forestry and the U.S. Forest Service
Chapter 4 The Political Economy of the National Park System
Chapter 5 Wilderness Preservation Policy: The Cases of Yosemite Park and Jackson Hole
Chapter 6 Anatomy of a Wilderness Controversy: The Creation of Redwood National Park
Chapter 7 The Legislative Process and the Clean Air Act of 1990
Chapter 8 Conclusion: Political Power and the Environment
Chapter 9 Bibliography
Refreshing in its unusual criticism of main stream pluralist assumptions about environmental politics and policy.
— Political Science Quarterly
Lucid and well-written.
— American Political Science Review
Gonzalez's examples are fascinating and informative.
— Political Studies Review
Corporate Power and the Environment makes for very interesting reading due to its extensive use of congressional records, newspaper accounts, memoirs, personal correspondence, and other primary materials.
— Environment
This study does succeed in several important respects. Its presentation of both theoretical and historical material is clear, making the book suitable for use as a companion text in undergraduate public policy or environmental policy classes. It offers a wealth of information about the formation of policy regimes in a variety of environmental and natural resource policy arenas, which, taken together, mount a persuasive case that environmental policy is no "oasis of democracy", free from corporate influence. Of particular importance is its discussion of the effect of policy-planning networks on environmental policy formation. This is a subject that has received scant attention in previous literature and is justly emphasized here.
— Journal of Politics
This thoughtful and provocative study does an excellent job explaining how economic elites have significantly influenced American environmental policymaking over time. Professor Gonzalez's book challenges traditional arguments by pluralists and offers new and exciting insights into how environmental policy is really made in the U.S. This book is must-reading for all students in public policy.
— Sheldon Kamieniecki, University of Southern California
Recommended for students in public policy and for anyone interested in environmental issues and the policymaking process.
— Perspectives on Political Science
Gonzalez's text provides a dense and readable account of some of the early influences that shaped the US Forestry Service. A competent and concise introduction to the topic.
— Environmental Politics
An excellent and fascinating study.
— Corporate Power and The Environment
Corporate Power and the Environmentprovides an important first step in the application of critical theories of the state to environmental scholarship. As such, it is an essential addition to curriculums on environmental policy and environmental history.
— Capitalism Nature Socialism
The empirical work here is excellent, with strong case studies of forestry, national parks, and the Clean Air Act of 1990.
— Organization and Environment