Tietenberg T., Lewis L. (2012). Environmental and natural resource economics. 9 ed. New Jersey (États-Unis) : Pearson Education. 666 p.
Titre : | Environmental and natural resource economics |
Auteurs : | T. Tietenberg ; L. Lewis |
Type de document : | E-Book |
Mention d'édition : | 9 |
Editeur : | New Jersey [États-Unis] : Pearson Education, 2012 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 987-0-13-139257-1 |
Format : | 666 p. / réf., tabl., graph. |
Langues : | Anglais |
Langues du résumé : | Anglais |
Catégories : |
Catégories principales 07 - ENVIRONNEMENT ; 7.2 - Politique de l'EnvironnementThésaurus IAMM ECONOMIE DE L'ENVIRONNEMENT ; MANUEL ; FUTUR ; EVALUATION ECONOMIQUE ; RESSOURCE NATURELLE ; POLITIQUE DE L'ENVIRONNEMENT ; ANALYSE COUT AVANTAGE ; ENVIRONNEMENT ; RESSOURCE RENOUVELABLE ; RECYCLAGE DES DECHETS ; EAU ; POLITIQUE AGRICOLE ; ECONOMIE FORESTIERE ; GESTION DES PECHES ; POLLUTION ; RISQUE ; SUBSTANCE TOXIQUE ; DEVELOPPEMENT DURABLE ; ENERGIE ; AIDE A LA DECISION ; RESSOURCE EN EAU ; RESSOURCE FONCIERE ; SECURITE ALIMENTAIRE ; FORET ; BIEN PUBLIC ; CHANGEMENT CLIMATIQUE |
Résumé : | A glance at any newspaper will confirm that environmental economics is now a major player in environmental policy. Concepts such as cap-and-trade, renewable portfolio standards, block pricing, renewable energy credits, development impact fees, conservation easements, carbon trading, the commons, congestion pricing, corporate average fuel economy standards, pay-as-you-throw, debt-for-nature swaps, extended producer responsibility, sprawl, leapfrogging, pollution havens, strategic petroleum reserves, and sustainable development have moved from the textbook to the legislative hearing room. As the large number of current examples in Environmental & Natural Resource Economics demonstrates, ideas that were once restricted to academic discussions are now not only part of the policy mix, but they are making a significant difference as well. |
Note de contenu : |
1 Visions of the Future
2 The Economic Approach: Property Rights, Externalities, and Environmental Problems 3 Evaluating Trade-Offs: BenefitCost Analysis and Other Decision-Making Metrics 4 Valuing the Environment: Methods 5 Dynamic Efficiency and Sustainable Development 6 Depletable Resource Allocation: The Role of Longer Time Horizons, Substitutes, and Extraction Cost 7 Energy: The Transition from Depletable to Renewable Resources 8 Recyclable Resources: Minerals, Paper, Bottles, and E-Waste 9 Replenishable but Depletable Resources: Water 10 A Locationally Fixed, Multipurpose Resource: Land 11 Reproducible Private Property Resources: Agriculture and Food Security 12 Storable, Renewable Resources: Forests 13 Common-Pool Resources: Fisheries and Other Commercially Valuable Species 14 Economics of Pollution Control: An Overview 15 Stationary-Source Local and Regional Air Pollution 16 Climate Change 17 Mobile-Source Air Pollution 18 Water Pollution 19 Toxic Substances and Environmental Justice 20 The Quest for Sustainable Development 21 Population and Development 22 Visions of the Future Revisited |
Cote : | Réservé lecteur CIHEAM |