Contents:
Acknowledgements
Introduction Robert N. Stavins
PART I OVERVIEW AND PRINCIPLES
1. Don Fullerton and Robert Stavins (1998), ‘How economists see the
environment’, Nature, 395, October, 433–4
2. R. H. Coase (1960), ‘The problem of social cost’, Journal of Law
and Economics, 3, October, 1–44
PART II THE COSTS AND BENEFITS OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
3. Antoine Dechezleprêtre and Misato Sato (2017), ‘The impacts of
environmental regulations on competitiveness’, Review of
Environmental Economics and Policy, 11 (2), July, 183–206
4. Trudy Ann Cameron (2010), ‘Euthanizing the value of a
statistical life’, Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 4
(2), July, 161–78
5. Richard T. Carson (2012), ‘Contingent valuation: a practical
alternative when prices aren’t available’, Journal of Economic
Perspectives, 26 (4), Fall, 27–42
6. Catherine L. Kling, Daniel J. Phaneuf and Jinhua Zhao (2012),
‘From Exxon to BP: has some number become better than no number?’,
Journal of Economic Perspectives, 26 (4), Fall, 3–26
7. Jerry Hausman (2012), ‘Contingent valuation: from dubious to
hopeless’, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 26 (4), Fall,
43–56
PART III THE GOALS OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY: ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY AND
BENEFIT–COST ANALYSIS
8. Kenneth J. Arrow, Maureen L. Cropper, George C. Eads, Robert W.
Hahn, Lester B. Lave, Roger G. Noll, Paul R. Portney, Milton
Russell, Richard Schmalensee, V. Kerry Smith and Robert N. Stavins
(1996), ‘Is there a role for benefit-cost analysis in
environmental, health, and safety regulation?’ Science, 272 (5259),
April, 221–2
9. Lawrence H. Goulder and Robert N. Stavins (2002), ‘An eye on the
future’, Nature, 419, October, 673–4
10. K. Arrow, M. Cropper, C. Gollier, B. Groom, G. Heal, R. Newell,
W. Nordhaus, R. Pindyck, W. Pizer, P. Portney, T. Sterner, R. S. J.
Tol and M. Weitzman (2013), ‘Determining benefits and costs for
future generations’, Science, 341 (6144), July, 349–50
11. Ted Gayer and W. Kip Viscusi (2016), ‘Resisting abuses of
benefit–cost analysis’, National Affairs, 35, Spring, 59–71
PART IV THE MEANS OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY: COST EFFECTIVENESS AND
MARKET-BASED INSTRUMENTS
12. Richard Schmalensee and Robert N. Stavins (2017), ‘Lessons
learned from three decades of experience with cap and trade’,
Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 11 (1), Winter,
59–79
13. Richard Schmalensee and Robert N. Stavins (2013), ‘The SO2
allowance trading system: the ironic history of a grand policy
experiment’, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 27 (1), Winter,
103–22
14. Karen Fisher-Vanden and Sheila Olmstead (2013), ‘Moving
pollution trading from air to water: potential, problems, and
prognosis’, Journal of
Economic Perspectives, 27 (1), Winter, 147–72
PART V ECONOMICS OF NATURAL RESOURCES
15. Robert M. Solow (1974), ‘The economics of resources or the
resources of economics’, American Economic Review, 64 (2), May,
1–14
16. Thomas Covert, Michael Greenstone and Christopher R. Knittel
(2016), ‘Will we ever stop using fossil fuels?’, Journal of
Economic Perspectives, 30 (1), Winter, 117–38
17. Sheila M. Olmstead (2010), ‘The economics of managing scarce
water resources’, Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 4
(2), Summer, 179–98
18. Severin Borenstein (2012), ‘The private and public economics of
renewable electricity generation’, Journal of Economic
Perspectives, 26 (1), Winter, 67–92
PART VI GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE
19. Joseph E. Aldy, Alan J. Krupnick, Richard G. Newell, Ian W. H.
Parry and William A. Pizer (2010), ‘Designing climate mitigation
policy’, Journal of
Economic Literature, 48 (4), December, 903–34
20. William Nordhaus (2007), ‘Critical assumptions in the Stern
Review on climate change’, Science, 317 (5835), July, 201–2
21. Nicholas Stern and Chris Taylor (2007), ‘Climate change: risk,
ethics, and the Stern Review’, Science, 317 (5835), July, 203–4
22. Richard G. Newell, William A. Pizer and Daniel Raimi (2013),
‘Carbon markets 15 years after Kyoto: lessons learned, new
challenges’, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 27 (1), Winter,
123–46
23. Daniel M. Bodansky, Seth A. Hoedl, Gilbert E. Metcalf and
Robert N. Stavins (2016), ‘Facilitating linkage of climate policies
through the Paris outcome’, Climate Policy, 16 (8), 956–72
24. Richard S. J. Tol (2018), ‘The economic impacts of climate
change’, Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 12 (1),
Winter, 4–25
PART VII SUSTAINABILITY, THE COMMONS, AND GLOBALIZATION
25. Robert M. Solow (1992), ‘Sustainability: an economist’s
perspective’,National Geographic: Research and Exploration, 8,
10–21
26. Elinor Ostrom (2009), ‘A general framework for analyzing
sustainability of social-ecological systems’, Science, 325 (5939),
July, 419–22
27. Robert N. Stavins (2011), ‘The problem of the commons: still
unsettled after 100 years’, American Economic Review, 101 (1),
February, 81–108
28. Forest L. Reinhardt, Robert N. Stavins and Richard H. K. Vietor
(2008), ‘Corporate social responsibility through an economic lens’,
Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 2 (2), Summer,
219–39
29. Michael Greenstone and B. Kelsey Jack (2018), ‘Environmental
economics in developing countries: an emerging field’
PART VIII BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS AND THE ENVIRONMENT
30. Jason F. Shogren and Laura O. Taylor (2008), ‘On
behavioral-environmental economics’, Review of Environmental
Economics and Policy, 2 (1), Winter, 26–44
31. Cass R. Sunstein and Lucia A. Reisch (2014), ‘Automatically
green: behavioural economics and environmental protection’, Harvard
Environmental Law Review, 38 (1), 127–58
32. Todd D. Gerarden, Richard G. Newell and Robert N. Stavins
(2017), ‘Assessing the energy-efficiency gap’, Journal of Economic
Literature, 55 (4), December, 1486–525
PART IX ECONOMICS AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY MAKING
33. A. Myrick Freeman III (2002), ‘Environmental policy since Earth
Day I: what have we gained?’, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 16
(1), Winter, 125–46
34. Robert W. Hahn (2000), ‘The impact of economics on
environmental policy’, Journal of Environmental Economics and
Management, 39 (3),
May, 375–99
Index
Edited by Robert N. Stavins, A.J. Meyer Professor of Energy and Economic Development, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; University Fellow, Resources for the Future; and Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research, US
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