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Pollution and property: comparing ownership institutions for environmental protection

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Environmental protection and resource conservation depend on the imposition of property rights (broadly defined) because in the absence of some property system - private, common, or public - resource degradation and depletion are inevitable.

But there is no universal, first-best property regime for environmental protection in this second-best world.

Using case studies and examples taken from countries around the world, this 2002 book demonstrates that the choice of ownership institution is contingent upon institutional, technological, and ecological circumstances that determine the differential costs of instituting, implementing, and maintaining alternative regimes.

Consequently, environmental protection is likely to be more effective and more efficient in a society that relies on multiple (and often mixed) property regimes.

The book concludes with an assessment of the important contemporary issue of 'takings', which arise when different property regimes collide.

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£110.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107124050 / 9781107124059
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
344.046
18/07/2002
English
202 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%