Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 225
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8476-8571-4 • Paperback • October 1997 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
Terry L. Anderson is professor of economics at Montana State University and executive director of the Political Economy Research Center in Bozeman, Montana. Peter J. Hill is professor of economics at Wheaton College.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Environmental Federalism: Thinking Smaller
Chapter 2 Sizing Up Sovereigns: Federal Systems, Their Origin, Their Decline, Their Prospects
Chapter 3 Public Land Federalism: Go Away and Give Us More Money
Chapter 4 State Trust Lands: The Culture of Administrative Accountability
Chapter 5 Federalism and Wildlife Conservation in the West
Chapter 6 Pesticides and Environmental Federalism: An Empirical and Qualitative Analysis of § 24(c) Registrations
Chapter 7 Water Federalism: Governmental Competition and Conflict over Western Waters
Chapter 8 Western States and Environmental Federalism: An Examination of Institutional Viability
Chapter 9 Why States, Not EPA, Should Set Pollution Standards
Chapter 10 Index
This volume is worth reading not only for its provocative ideas but also because its topic couldn't be more timely.
— Denise Scheberle, University of Wisconsin; Political Science Quarterly, Winter 98-99
Environmental Federalism provides much useful information for people interested in hastening the transfer of responsibility for environmental quality control to state and local governments.
— Zachary A. Smith, Northern Arizona University; Perspectives on Political Science, Winter 1999, Vol. 28, No. 1