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Environment and Resource Policies for the Integrated World Economy (Paperback)
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Environment and Resource Policies for the Integrated World Economy (Paperback)
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To whom do the Earth's riches belong--all of mankind, the nations
in which those riches are found, or individuals? Why should a
relatively small number of Arabs own most of the world's oil
reserves? Why should South Africans own most of the world's gold
and diamond resources? Or why should the Americans and Canadians
own the agriculturally rich Great Plains? Shouldn't these resources
and the environment be treated as endowments available to all
mankind? Long ago, the international community agreed to a system
of national ownership of natural resources, giving states
sovereignty over their respective territories. In recent years,
however, environmentalists have raised questions about this
distribution of property rights with respect to global
environmental issues, such as atmospheric disposal of waste gases,
preservation of the Earth's genetic material, and the destruction
of tropical rain forests. When environmental impacts are global,
international action may be warranted to ensure that individual
nations are complying with transnational standards. In this book,
part of the Brookings Integrating National Economies series,
Richard N. Cooper evaluates the need for international policy
action in natural resource and environmental management. Using
numerous examples, he illustrates the issues that cause conflict in
environment and resources policies. Cooper divides the use of
natural resources into three categories and examines the rationale
for international action in each. He discusses the use of resources
not yet subject to national jurisdiction, such as Antarctica, open
oceans, and outer space, and analyzes the effects of national
action on other nations via both market andenvironmental
externalities. Taking into account the diversity of individual
states' circumstances and priorities, Copper concludes that stiff
environmental regulations generally are not the best answer to
environmental management. He explains that developing countries are
not likely to take actions to improve environmental hazards if
those actions risk slowing their economic growth. Instead, policies
that provide incentives for compliance with international standards
are needed. The book outlines past internatioal actions, what has
worked and what has not, and provides recommendations for future
actions. A volume of Brookings' Integrating National Economies
Series
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