Private Rights in Public Resources: Equity and Property Allocation in Market-Based Environmental PolicyPrivatizing public resources by creating stronger property rights, including so-called rights to pollute, is an increasingly popular environmental policy option. While advocates of this type of market-based environmental policy tend to focus on its efficiency and ecological implications, such policies also raise important considerations of equity and distributive justice. Private Rights in Public Resources confronts these ethical implications directly, balancing political theory and philosophy with detailed analysis of the politics surrounding three important policy instruments--the Kyoto Protocol, the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments, and the 1934 Taylor Grazing Act. Author Leigh Raymond reviews legislative records and administrative documents and interviews key policymakers. Confirming that much of the debate in the selected policies centers on the equity or fairness of the initial allocation of property rights, he applies the theories of John Locke, Morris Cohen, and others to build a framework for identifying the competing norms of equity in play. Raymond's study reveals that, despite the different historical and ecological settings, the political actors struggled to reconcile similar arguments-and were often able to achieve a similar synthesis of conflicting ownership ideas. Rather than offering a familiar argument for or against these policies on ethical grounds, the book explains how ideas about equity help determine a policy's political fate. Shedding light on the complex equity principles used to shape and evaluate these controversial initiatives, this empirical analysis will be of interest to those on all sides of the debate over market-based policies, as well as those interested in the role of normative principles in politics more generally. |
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acid rain program allocation based allocation principles allocation process allocation rules allowances approach Archie Ryan argued bill Btus Carpenter Chapter Clean Air Act climate change commensurate property conflict Congress created debate developed nations discussion distribution District Advisors Division of Grazing economic egalitarian emissions rate emissions reductions emissions rights environmental policy equity norms example favor Forest Service fractious holism FRC-DPL GHG emissions global grazing permits greenhouse gas Hegelian HEPSH historical Humean ideas initial allocation Interior intrinsic allocation intrinsic and instrumental issue January 24 Kyoto Protocol legislative licensed property rights livestock Lockean market-based policies NA-DC NA-DNV negotiations October outcome perspective plants political pollution possessory prepolitical prior private property property theory framework Proposals from Parties public domain public lands public policy QELROS range users rational choice theory redistribution resource Secretariat Senate SEPSH specific standard sulfur dioxide Taylor Grazing Act Transcript type of right U.S. Congress
