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Much applied environmental economics is concerned with the
valuation of changes in environmental quality. Obtaining reliable
valuation estimates requires attention to theoretical and
econometric issues that are often quite subtle. Volume 2 of the
Handbook of Environmental Economics presents both the theory and
the practice of environmental valuation. It synthesizes the vast
literature that has accumulated since the publication of the
Handbook of Natural Resource and Energy Economics two decades ago.
It includes chapters on individual valuation methods written by
researchers responsible for fundamental advances in those methods.
It also includes cross-cutting chapters that deal with aspects of
welfare theory, uncertainty, experimental methods, and public
health that are pertinent to valuation. Throughout the volume,
attention is paid to research and policy issues that arise not only
in high-income countries, where most of the theory and econometrics
that underlie applied valuation methods have been developed, but
also in poorer parts of the world. The volume provides a
state-of-the-art reference for scholars and practitioners alike.
The Handbook of Environmental Economics focuses on the economics of
environmental externalities and environmental public goods. Volume
I examines environmental degradation and policy responses from a
microeconomic, institutional standpoint. Its perspective is
dynamic, including a consideration of the dynamics of natural
systems, and global, with attention paid to issues in both rich and
poor nations. In addition to chapters on well-established topics
such as the theory and practice of pollution regulation, it
includes chapters on new areas of environmental economics research
related to common property management regimes; population and
poverty; mechanism design; political economy of regulation;
experimental evaluations of policy instruments; and technological
change.
Many of the frontiers of environmental economics research are at
the interface of large-scale and long-term environmental change
with national and global economic systems. This is also where some
of the most of challenging environmental policy issues occur.
Volume 3 of the Handbook of Environmental Economics provides a
synthesis of the latest theory on economywide and international
environmental issues and a critical review of models for analyzing
those issues. It begins with chapters on the fundamental
relationships that connect environmental resources to economic
growth and long-run social welfare. The following chapters consider
how environmental policy differs in a general-equiIibrium setting
from a partial-equilibrium setting and in a distorted economy from
a perfect economy. The volume closes with chapters on environmental
issues that cross or transcend national borders, such as trade and
the environment, biodiversity conservation, acid rain, ozone
depletion, and global climate change. The volume provides a useful
reference for not only natural resource and environmental
economists but also international economists, development
economists, and macroeconomists.
First Published in 2011. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Is knowledge an economic good? Which are the characteristics of the
institutions regulating the production and diffusion of knowledge?
Cumulation of knowledge is a key determinant of economic growth,
but only recently knowledge has moved to the core of economic
analysis. Recent literature also gives profound insights into
events like scientific progress, artistic and craft development
which have been rarely addressed as socio-economic institutions,
being the domain of sociologists and historians rather than
economists. This volume adopts a multidisciplinary approach to
bring knowledge in the focus of attention, as a key economic issue.
What potential problems does biodiversity loss create for
humankind? What basis is there for biologists' concern about what
has been described as the sixth mass extinction on our planet? The
Biodiversity Programme of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences'
Beijer Institute brought together eminent economists and ecologists
to consider these and other questions about the nature and
significance of the problem of biodiversity loss. This volume
reports key findings from that programme. In encouraging
collaborative interdisciplinary work between the closely related
disciplines of economics and ecology, programme participants hoped
to shed new light on the concept of diversity, the implications of
biological diversity for the functioning of ecosystems, the driving
forces behind biodiversity loss, and the options for promoting
biodiversity conservation. The results of the programme are
surprising. They indicate that the main costs of biodiversity loss
may not be the loss of genetic material, but the loss of ecosystem
resilience and the insurance it provides against the uncertain
environmental effects of economic and population growth. Because
this is as much a local as a global problem, biodiversity
conservation offers both local and global benefits. Since the
causes of biodiversity loss lie in the incentives to local users,
that is where reform must begin if the problem is to be tackled
successfully.
This book honours Partha Dasgupta, and the field he helped
establish; environment and development economics. It concerns the
relationship between social systems (to include families, local
communities, national economies, and the world as a whole) and
natural systems (critical ecosystems, forests, water resources,
mineral deposits, pollution, fisheries, and the Earth's climate).
Above all, it concerns the poverty-environment nexus: the complex
pathways by which people become or remain poor, and resources
become or remain overexploited. With contributions by some of the
world's leading economists, including five recipients of the Nobel
Prize in Economics, in addition to scholars based in developing
countries, this volume offers a unique perspective on the
environmental issues that matter most to developing countries.
This volume reports key findings of the Biodiversity Program of the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences' Beijer Institute. The program
brought together a number of eminent ecologists and economists to
consider the nature and significance of the biodiversity problem.
In encouraging collaborative work between these closely related
disciplines it sought to shed new light on the concept of
diversity; the implications of biological diversity for the
functioning of ecosystems; the driving forces behind biodiversity
loss; and the options for promoting biodiversity conservation. The
results of the program are surprising. It is shown that the core of
the biodiversity problem is a loss of ecosystem resilience and the
insurance it provides against the uncertain environmental effects
of economic and population growth. This is as much a local as a
global problem, implying that biodiversity conservation offers
benefits that are as much local as global. The solutions as well as
the causes of biodiversity loss lie in incentives to local users.
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