Retaking Rationality: How Cost-Benefit Analysis Can Better Protect the Environment and Our Health

Our Price: R 656.00
eBucks / Discovery Miles cost: 6560
Retail Price: R 739.00
You Save: R 83.00
Delivery Time: 7 to 15 Working Days
Format: Paperback
Imported: USA
Sign up with Wantitall today and get R50 off your first order!Enhance your order by adding 2 accessories below to your cart,receive FREE DELIVERY!
Enhance Your Order
Federal Courts - Standards of Review:  Appellate Court Review of District Court Decisions and Agency Actions (American Casebooks)
R 1,382.00
Cost-Benefit Analysis: Economic, Philosophical, and Legal Perspectives
R 625.00
Breaking the Vicious Circle: Toward Effective Risk Regulation
R 600.00
Priceless: On Knowing The Price Of Everything And The Value Of Nothing
R 522.00
Markets and the Environment (Foundations of Contemporary Environmental Studies Series)
R 567.00


Product Features
  • Languages: English
  • Quantity: 1
  • Publication date: 2011-05-13
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Click to view enlarged image
Retaking Rationality: How Cost-Benefit Analysis Can Better Protect the Environment and Our Health
Previous
Next
1 pictures available.
Product Description
That America's natural environment has been degraded and despoiled over the past 25 years is beyond dispute. Nor has there been any shortage of reasons why-short-sighted politicians, a society built on over-consumption, and the dramatic weakening of environmental regulations.

In Retaking Rationality, Richard L. Revesz and Michael A. Livermore argue convincingly that one of the least understood-and most important-causes of our failure to protect the environment has been a misguided rejection of reason. The authors show that environmentalists, labor unions, and other progressive groups have declined to participate in the key governmental proceedings concerning the cost-benefit analysis of federal regulations. As a result of this vacuum, industry groups have captured cost-benefit analysis and used it to further their anti-regulatory ends. Beginning in 1981, the federal Office of Management and Budget and the federal courts have used cost-benefit analysis extensively to determine which environmental, health, and safety regulations are approved and which are sent back to the drawing board. The resulting imbalance in political participation has profoundly affected the nation's regulatory and legal landscape. But Revesz and Livermore contend that economic analysis of regulations is necessary and that it needn't conflict with-and can in fact support-a more compassionate approach to environmental policy. Indeed, they show that we cannot give up on rationality if we truly want to protect our natural environment.

Retaking Rationality makes clear that by embracing and reforming cost-benefit analysis, and by joining reason and compassion, progressive groups can help enact strong environmental and public health regulation.
Sign Up Today
Enquiries


WantItAll (Pty) Ltd 2005 - 2013 | Unit 8 Eastborough Office Park, 15 Olympia Street, Marlboro, Gauteng, 2063, South Africa | Company Reg No. 2007/024936/07 | VAT No. 4920242924