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This book dispels common myths about electricity and electricity
policy and reveals how government policies manipulate energy
markets, create hidden costs, and may inflict a net harm on the
American people and the environment. Climate change, energy
generation and use, and environmental degradation are among the
most salient—and controversial—political issues today. Our
country's energy future will be determined by the policymakers who
enact laws that favor certain kinds of energy production while
discouraging others as much as by the energy-production companies
or the scientists working to reduce the environmental impact of all
energy production. The Reality of American Energy: The Hidden Costs
of Electricity provides rare insights into the politics and
economics surrounding electricity in the United States. It
identifies the economic, physical, and environmental implications
of distorting energy markets to limit the use of fossil fuels while
increasing renewable energy production and explains how these
unseen effects of favoring renewable energy may be
counterproductive to the economic interests of American citizens
and to the protection of the environment. The first two chapters of
the book introduce the subject of electricity policy in the United
States and to enable readers to understand why policymakers do what
they do. The remainder of the book examines the realities of the
major electricity sources in the United States: coal, natural gas,
nuclear, hydrodynamic, wind, biomass, solar, and geothermal. Each
of these types of energy sources is analyzed in a dedicated chapter
that explains how the electricity source works and identifies how
politics and public policy shape the economic and environmental
impacts associated with them.
Renewable and carbon-neutral energy have been promoted as the
future of energy production in the United States. Non-traditional
energy sources show promise as alternatives to fossil fuels and may
provide a sustainable source of energy in increasingly uncertain
energy markets. However, these new sources of energy face their own
set of political, administrative, and legal challenges. Green vs.
Green explores how mixed land ownership and existing law and
regulation present serious challenges to the development of
alternative energy sources in the United States. Analytically
examining and comparing five green energy sectors; wind, solar,
geothermal, biofuel and hydro power, Ryan M. Yonk, Randy T.
Simmons, and Brian C. Steed argue that discussing alternative
energy without understanding these pitfalls creates unrealistic
expectations regarding the ability to substitute "green" energy for
traditional sources. The micro-goals of protecting individual
areas, species, small-scale ecosystems, and other local
environmental aims often limits ability to achieve macro-goals like
preventing global climate change or transitioning to large-scale
green energy production. Statutes and regulations designed to
protect environmental and cultural integrity from degradation
directly conflict with other stated environmental ends. Although
there is substantial interest in adding clean energy to the grid,
it appears that localized environmental interests interfere with
broader environmental policy goals and the application of existing
environmental laws and regulations may push us closer to gridlock.
Green vs. Green provides a fascinating look into how existing
environmental law created or will create substantial regulatory
hurdles for future energy generations.
The increased use of direct democracy measures across the United
States has brought attention to the individual petitioner however
their motivations and goals continue to be an enigma. Drawing on
behavioral, historical and legal analysis to provide a more
concrete depiction of these individuals, expert contributors
examine the true personalities, motivations and expectations,
successes and failures of petitioners in the direct democracy
process and how they culminate in policy formation across the
United States. Six typologies; the zealot, the victim, the amateur,
the lawyer, the professional, and the politician are identified and
later applied to four key policy areas, taxation, health, the
environment and education. A lucid contribution to the existing
literature on direct democracy and an excellent resource for
studying how petitioners are able to influence their communities
beyond the ballot box.
This book explores the relationship between quality of life,
policy, and political behavior. Using carefully collected, granular
data, the authors create a measurement of quality of life for each
county in the United States. After applying the index to each
county and calculating scores, the results are applied to key
political and social questions, such as, variation in voter
turnout, electoral choices, and the allocation of federal aid. By
tying quality of life directly to social and political outcomes,
the index thus makes possible the development of policies that
actually improve the quality of life of those they effect. This
book is divided into three sections. Section One delves into the
theory of quality of life research and the indicators used in the
development of the index. Section Two explores the relationship
between quality of life and various political phenomena such as
trust in government, political participation, electoral politics,
direct democracy, government spending, and local government.
Section Three discusses suggestions for incorporating life quality
in the political and policy process and identifying strategies for
the direct application of these principals by policymakers. This
book will be useful for students and scholars interested in
political behavior, political sociology, policy, and quality of
life studies, as well as policymakers interested in incorporating
quality of life studies in their work.
The increased use of direct democracy measures across the United
States has brought attention to the individual petitioner however
their motivations and goals continue to be an enigma. Drawing on
behavioral, historical and legal analysis to provide a more
concrete depiction of these individuals, expert contributors
examine the true personalities, motivations and expectations,
successes and failures of petitioners in the direct democracy
process and how they culminate in policy formation across the
United States. Six typologies; the zealot, the victim, the amateur,
the lawyer, the professional, and the politician are identified and
later applied to four key policy areas, taxation, health, the
environment and education. A lucid contribution to the existing
literature on direct democracy and an excellent resource for
studying how petitioners are able to influence their communities
beyond the ballot box.
Renewable and carbon-neutral energy have been promoted as the
future of energy production in the United States. Non-traditional
energy sources show promise as alternatives to fossil fuels and may
provide a sustainable source of energy in increasingly uncertain
energy markets. However, these new sources of energy face their own
set of political, administrative, and legal challenges. Green vs.
Green explores how mixed land ownership and existing law and
regulation present serious challenges to the development of
alternative energy sources in the United States. Analytically
examining and comparing five green energy sectors; wind, solar,
geothermal, biofuel and hydro power, Ryan M. Yonk, Randy T.
Simmons, and Brian C. Steed argue that discussing alternative
energy without understanding these pitfalls creates unrealistic
expectations regarding the ability to substitute "green" energy for
traditional sources. The micro-goals of protecting individual
areas, species, small-scale ecosystems, and other local
environmental aims often limits ability to achieve macro-goals like
preventing global climate change or transitioning to large-scale
green energy production. Statutes and regulations designed to
protect environmental and cultural integrity from degradation
directly conflict with other stated environmental ends. Although
there is substantial interest in adding clean energy to the grid,
it appears that localized environmental interests interfere with
broader environmental policy goals and the application of existing
environmental laws and regulations may push us closer to gridlock.
Green vs. Green provides a fascinating look into how existing
environmental law created or will create substantial regulatory
hurdles for future energy generations.
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