In the last thirty years, two opposing trends have emerged in environmental policy: environmental justice and market-based mechanisms. They present fundamental tensions. The environmental justice movement’s distributional goals conflict with market programs’ focus on cost-effectively achieving aggregate goals, without regard to distribution. And the environmental justice movement’s participatory goals conflict with market programs’ focus on industry autonomy and privatized decisionmaking. The tension between environmental justice and markets is arising in the context of cap-and-trade programs for greenhouse gases (GHGs). While GHGs do not impose localized harms, GHG trading policies nonetheless raise distributional issues because GHG gas...
This Article considers three fairness issues relating to a cap-and-trade system: fairness to industr...
Many countries are implementing or at least considering policies to counter increasingly certain neg...
We have been asked to examine climate change justice by discussing the methods of allocating the cos...
This article argues that, except in California, environmental justice considerations have not receiv...
Trade-offs complicate development interventions so that benefits for one group or area often imply c...
The last decade of environmental advocacy has been characterized by the application of economic prin...
The global public good of climate stabilization, pursued in the negotiations leading up to the Kyoto...
Greenhouse gas reductions would cost some nations much more than others, and benefit some nations fa...
There is no such thing as free lunch in environmental policy. Somebody, somewhere has to pay for cli...
ABSTRACT: Mapping Climate Justice proposes a 3-dimensional environmental justice approach to share e...
Cap and trade is controversial in part because of claims that it is unjust, an issue that was highli...
Presented at the Environmental justice in the Anthropocene symposium held on April 24-25, 2017 at th...
This dissertation extends John Rawls’s mature theory of justice out to address the environmental cha...
Many countries are implementing or at least considering policies to counter increasingly certain neg...
This Comment examines the development of both the environmental justice movement and the traditional...
This Article considers three fairness issues relating to a cap-and-trade system: fairness to industr...
Many countries are implementing or at least considering policies to counter increasingly certain neg...
We have been asked to examine climate change justice by discussing the methods of allocating the cos...
This article argues that, except in California, environmental justice considerations have not receiv...
Trade-offs complicate development interventions so that benefits for one group or area often imply c...
The last decade of environmental advocacy has been characterized by the application of economic prin...
The global public good of climate stabilization, pursued in the negotiations leading up to the Kyoto...
Greenhouse gas reductions would cost some nations much more than others, and benefit some nations fa...
There is no such thing as free lunch in environmental policy. Somebody, somewhere has to pay for cli...
ABSTRACT: Mapping Climate Justice proposes a 3-dimensional environmental justice approach to share e...
Cap and trade is controversial in part because of claims that it is unjust, an issue that was highli...
Presented at the Environmental justice in the Anthropocene symposium held on April 24-25, 2017 at th...
This dissertation extends John Rawls’s mature theory of justice out to address the environmental cha...
Many countries are implementing or at least considering policies to counter increasingly certain neg...
This Comment examines the development of both the environmental justice movement and the traditional...
This Article considers three fairness issues relating to a cap-and-trade system: fairness to industr...
Many countries are implementing or at least considering policies to counter increasingly certain neg...
We have been asked to examine climate change justice by discussing the methods of allocating the cos...