The December 12, 1997 Issue of IBPP provides an analysis supporting the trading and purchasing of pollution- emissions rights as means to responsibly confront the threat of global warming. The present article maintains this stance in critiquing a December 15, 1997 article in The New York Times by Michael J. Sandel, a professor of government at Harvard University
This article identifies the fundamental policy issues that must be dealt with in designing market-ba...
There is a some consensus among economists, environmentalists, and politicians that some form of “ca...
In this paper we investigate how moral considerations, modelled as identity effects, affects an endo...
The idea of permit trading in the United States can be traced as far back as the 1970s, but emission...
Global climate change raises profound questions for social and political theorists. The human impact...
This article explores whether emissions trading is morally defensible. To do so it examines three di...
International regulations target a global reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions through the al...
Several prominent philosophers have argued that CO2 emissions trading may be a morally justified mea...
We investigate how moral concerns about permit trading affect an endogenous pollution permit trading...
AbstractMoral objections to quota trade are common in public discussion. The underlying moral reason...
This Comment examines the development of both the environmental justice movement and the traditional...
In this paper we investigate how moral considerations, modelled as identity effects, affects an endo...
Tradeable pollution rights and emissions trading are being increasingly used as an environmental pol...
Although emissions trading is embraced as a means to curb carbon emissions and to incentivize the us...
This article examines the question of whether international markets in allowances conferring the rig...
This article identifies the fundamental policy issues that must be dealt with in designing market-ba...
There is a some consensus among economists, environmentalists, and politicians that some form of “ca...
In this paper we investigate how moral considerations, modelled as identity effects, affects an endo...
The idea of permit trading in the United States can be traced as far back as the 1970s, but emission...
Global climate change raises profound questions for social and political theorists. The human impact...
This article explores whether emissions trading is morally defensible. To do so it examines three di...
International regulations target a global reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions through the al...
Several prominent philosophers have argued that CO2 emissions trading may be a morally justified mea...
We investigate how moral concerns about permit trading affect an endogenous pollution permit trading...
AbstractMoral objections to quota trade are common in public discussion. The underlying moral reason...
This Comment examines the development of both the environmental justice movement and the traditional...
In this paper we investigate how moral considerations, modelled as identity effects, affects an endo...
Tradeable pollution rights and emissions trading are being increasingly used as an environmental pol...
Although emissions trading is embraced as a means to curb carbon emissions and to incentivize the us...
This article examines the question of whether international markets in allowances conferring the rig...
This article identifies the fundamental policy issues that must be dealt with in designing market-ba...
There is a some consensus among economists, environmentalists, and politicians that some form of “ca...
In this paper we investigate how moral considerations, modelled as identity effects, affects an endo...