Industrial innovation and environmental regulation : developing workable solutions

What role should governments play in protecting the environment and controlling the environmental impacts of industry? Do regulations benefit the environment? And how do they affect industrial innovation? Since the early 1970s, regulations have been used to coerce producers of goods and services into internalizing the environmental costs of production. These efforts have often faced opposition on practical and ideological grounds. Beginning in the 1980s, there has been a movement toward liberalization, coupled with the continued failure of the market to protect the environment as a public good. As a result, private and public sector interests have been debating the appropriate role of governments in protecting and improving the environment and controlling the environmental impact of industry. Using case studies from numerous countries, this book examines political and industrial trends and the responses to these challenges. The authors conclude that the complexities of environmental and economic relationships disallow universal solutions, and they stress the need for context-specific perspectives on the role of regulatory measures in environmental innovation.

[1]  Adam B. Jaffe,et al.  Environmental Regulation and Innovation: A Panel Data Study , 1996, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[2]  Arthur P.J. Mol,et al.  Globalization and Environmental Reform: The Ecological Modernization of the Global Economy , 2001 .

[3]  G. Hodgson Economics and institutions , 1988 .

[4]  K. Davis,et al.  The World Demographic Transition , 1945 .

[5]  Arthur P.J. Mol,et al.  Ecological modernisation around the world: An introduction , 2000 .

[6]  S. Parto,et al.  Economic Activity and Institutions: Taking Stock , 2005 .

[7]  M. Porter,et al.  The Competitive Advantage of Nations. , 1990 .

[8]  E. Ostrom Institutional Rational Choice , 2019, Theories of the Policy Process.

[9]  M. V. Asselt,et al.  More evolution than revolution: transition management in public policy , 2001 .

[10]  Martin Jänicke The Political System’s Capacity for Environmental Policy , 1997 .

[11]  M. Porter,et al.  Toward a New Conception of the Environment-Competitiveness Relationship , 1995 .

[12]  J. J. Kay,et al.  A nonequilibrium thermodynamic framework for discussing ecosystem integrity , 1991 .

[13]  Stephen C. Smith The competitive advantage of nations: Michael E. Porter, (Free Press, New York, 1990) pp. xx + 855 , 1993 .

[14]  Richard Welford,et al.  The Earthscan reader in business and the environment , 1996 .

[15]  C. Gersick REVOLUTIONARY CHANGE THEORIES: A MULTILEVEL EXPLORATION OF THE PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM PARADIGM , 1991 .