1st Edition
Environmental Management and Governance Intergovernmental Approaches to Hazards and Sustainability
Edited By Raymond Burby, Jennifer Dixon, Neil Ericksen, John Handmer, Peter May, Sarah Michaels, D. Ingle Smith
Copyright 1996
272 Pages
by
Routledge
272 Pages
by
Routledge
289 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
Problems for environmental management are taking on a new urgency. This book addresses aspects of environmental management that raise fundamental questions about governmental roles and the relationship of humans to the environment. It examines the interaction of local and national governments and the strengths and weaknesses of co-operative vs. coercive environmental management, through a focus on... Read more
Chapter 1 Rethinking Intergovernmental Environmental Management; Part 1 Policy Innovations in The United States, New Zealand, and Australia; Introduction1 Introduction; Chapter 2 Coercion and Prescription; Chapter 3 Devolution and Cooperation; Chapter 4 Toward Cooperative Policies; Part 2 The Policies in Practice; Introduction2 Introduction; Chapter 5 Policy to Implementation; Chapter 6 A Regional Government Role; Chapter 7 Local Planning, Compliance, and Innovation; Chapter 8 Sustainable Management Strategies; Chapter 9 Examining Outcomes of Cooperative Policies; Part 3 The Policy Innovations Revisited; Introduction3 Introduction; Chapter 10 The Commitment Conundrum; Chapter 11 Prospects for Cooperative Intergovernmental Policies;
Biography
Peter J.May, Raymond J. Burby, Neil J. Ericksen, John W. Handmer, Jennifer E. Dixon, Sarah Michaels, D. Ingle Smith
Environmental Management and Governance is a well-structured book. Readers can easily follow the logic of each chapter...For the most part the book is clearly written and well presented. Plates, figures and tables are numbered logically, well-positioned in relation to the text, and are of adequate size and visual quality. I believe that the book will be useful as a support text because of its information. The case studies will be most helpful for students...' - P.A. McManus, University of Newcastle, Australia.






