Analyzes environmental problems and policies in developing
countries around the world and discusses new prospects for
international cooperation and funding. Considers hard political
choices, who is to blame for environmental decay, who should pay to
overcome problems, and how policies should be administered. Experts
from different countries offer their perspectives about the role of
multilateral agencies, the North-South dimensions of environmental
problems since 1972, internal and external factors that have
affected Third World development, new measures and opportunities
since the Rio Summit conference, and case studies of representative
countries--India, China, Indonesia, Africa, Nigeria, Chile, and
Mexico. A bibliography enhances this authoritative study for the
use of political scientists, economists, and public administrators,
for teachers, students, and professionals.
General
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