000 | 01730nam a2200145Ia 4500 | ||
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999 |
_c176768 _d176768 |
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020 | _a9780521173926 | ||
040 | _cCUS | ||
082 |
_a333.7 _bEND/E |
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245 | 0 |
_aEnvironmental economics/ _btheory and policy _cEndres.Alfred |
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250 | _a1st.ed. | ||
260 |
_aUK: _bCambridge university press, _c2010. |
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300 | _a379 | ||
505 | _aPart I. The Internalization of Externalities as Central Theme of Environmental Policy: 1. Foundations; 2. Implications of making the concept of internalization programmatic in environment policy; Part II. Strategies for Internalizing Externalities: 3. Negotiations; 4. Environmental liability law; 5. Pigovian tax; Part III. Standard-Oriented Instruments of Environmental Policy: 6. Introduction; 7. Types of environmental policy instruments; 8. Assessment of environmental policy instruments; Part IV. Extensions of the Basic Environmental-Economics Model: 9. Environmental policy with pollutant interactions; 10. Environmental policy with imperfect competition; 11. Internalization negotiations with asymmetrical information; 12. The 'double dividend' of the green tax; 13. The induction of advances in environmental technology through environment policy; Part V. International Environmental Problems: 14. Introduction; 15. International environmental agreements; 16. Instruments of international environmental policy -- the example of the EU's emissions trading; 17. Epilogue: the vision of a federal US emission trading system; Part VI. Natural Resources and Sustainable Development: 18. Resource exhaustion -- the end of mankind?; 19. Renewable resources; 20. Sustainable development; Epilogue: three types of externality and the increasing difficulty of internalizing them. | ||
942 |
_cAC8 _04 |