Industrial transformation : environmental policy innovation in the United States and Europe ; [presented at a workshop at the Kennedy School of Havard University in spring of 2001
معرفی کتاب «Industrial transformation : environmental policy innovation in the United States and Europe ; [presented at a workshop at the Kennedy School of Havard University in spring of 2001» نوشتهٔ Theo J. N. M. de Bruijn; Vicki Norberg-Bohm; John F. Kennedy School of Government; Workshop Kennedy School of Harvard University، منتشرشده توسط نشر The MIT Press در سال 2005. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
The United States and European countries are experimenting with a new generation of policy approaches for combating environmental degradation. Industrial Transformation evaluates the effectiveness of twelve innovative voluntary, collaborative, and information-based programs,focusing particularly on the effectiveness of these programs in bringing about industrial transformation — changes in production and consumption structures that will help move their societies toward environmental sustainability.The twelve programs analyzed have the potential to create incentives for industry leadership, stimulate beyond-compliance behavior, address environmental degradation not currently regulated, and encourage innovative solutions by involving a wide range of stakeholders. The programs — six in the United States and six in Europe — include Energy Star product labeling in the United States, R&D collaboration in US Department of Energy programs, the US Toxic Release Inventories, the EU's Eco-Audit Regulation in the UK, the Dutch Target Group Policy, and the German End-of-Life Vehicles Program. The comparative analysis of the twelve programs proves that these new approaches are not a panacea for industrial transformation.
Taken together, the cases provide a range of experience from which to draw lessons for future policy design.
The United States and European countries are experimenting with a new generation of policy approaches for combating environmental degradation. Industrial Transformation evaluates the effectiveness of twelve innovative voluntary, collaborative, and information-based programs, focusing particularly on the effectiveness of these programs in bringing about industrial transformation--changes in production and consumption structures that will help move their societies toward environmental sustainability. The twelve programs analyzed have the potential to create incentives for industry leadership, stimulate beyond-compliance behavior, address environmental degradation not currently regulated, and encourage innovative solutions by involving a wide range of stakeholders. The programs--six in the United States and six in Europe--include Energy Star product labeling in the United States, R & D collaboration in US Department of Energy programs, the US Toxic Release Inventories, the EU's Eco-Audit Regulation in the UK, the Dutch Target Group Policy, and the German End-of-Life Vehicles Program. The comparative analysis of the twelve programs proves that these new approaches are not a panacea for industrial transformation. Taken together, the cases provide a range of experience from which to draw lessons for future policy design When environmental degradation emerged as a priority for government action in the early 1970s, most industrialized countries enacted media-specific legislation based on direct regulation that resulted in a set of ambient, emission, and technology standards that were enforced through permitting systems. Edited By Theo De Bruijn And Vicki Norberg-bohm. The Papers Included Were First Presented At A Workshop At The Kennedy School Of Harvard University In The Spring Of 2001--p. [ix]. Includes Bibliographical References And Index. A comparative analysis of environmental policy innovations in the United States and Europe that use voluntary, collaborative, and information-based approaches.