Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 284
Trim: 5¾ x 9
978-0-8476-8054-2 • Paperback • April 1995 • $71.00 • (£55.00)
Roger E. Meiners is Professor of Law and Economics at Clemson University. Bruce Yandle is Alumni Professor and First Savings Bank Scholar at Clemson University.
Chapter 1 Taking the Environment Seriously: What Does it Mean?
Chapter 2 How Much Is Enough? The Benefits and Costs of Environmental Protection
Chapter 3 Economics, Ethics, and Ecology
Chapter 4 Environmental Harms from Governmental Policy
Chapter 5 Clean Water Legislation: Reauthorize or Repeal?
Chapter 6 Superfund: The South Carolina Experience
Chapter 7 Acid Rain and the Clean Air Act: Lessons in Damage Control
Chapter 8 Fishing for Property Rights to Fish
Chapter 9 Community Markets to Control Agricultural Nonpoint Source Pollution
Chapter 10 Risky Business: Rational Ignorance in Assessing Environmental Hazards
Chapter 11 Environmental Calvinism: The Judeo-Christian Roots of Environmental Theology
This important book . . . is the cornerstone of a growing innovative literature which calls for unencumbered markets to deal with management of the environment.
— Gordon L. Brady, Public Choice
Solid analysis of the costs and benefits of existing programs including Superfund, the Clean Water Act, and the Clean Air Act. . . . For comparative use in courses on environmental economics and public policy.
— Choice Reviews