Resource economics : an economic approach to natural resource and environmental policy / John C. Bergstrom, Alan Randall.
Material type: TextPublication details: Cheltenham : Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar, c2010.Edition: 3rd edDescription: ix, 430 p. : ill. ; 25 cmISBN:- 9781849802482
- 333.7 BER
Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Mzumbe University Main Campus Library | Mzumbe University Main Campus Library | 333.7 BER (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 0072716 | ||
Book | Mzumbe University Main Campus Library | Mzumbe University Main Campus Library | 333.7 BER (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2 | Available | 0072717 |
Prev. ed.: Resource economics : an economic approach to natural resource and environmental policy / Alan Randall. 1987.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Part I. Natural resource and environmental policy and natural resource supply and scarcity
ch. 1. Economic growth, resource scarcity, and environmental degradation : where have we been and where are we going?
ch. 2. Ecosystem goods and services : how does a healthy environment support economic production, consumption, and quality of life?
ch. 3. Resource supply and scarcity : how do we define, measure, and monitor natural resource supply and scarcity?
ch. 4. Natural resources, the environment, and policy : what is the public policy context for natural resource and environmental economics?
Part II. Microeconomic theory foundations for production and consumption
ch. 5. Economic coordination and the price system : how does the market system work?
ch. 6. Economic efficiency : how does a healthy economy allocate natural resources to economic production and consumption?
ch. 7. Intertemporal efficiency : how do we efficiently allocate natural resources over time?
Part III. Economic theory and institutions for public policy
ch. 8. Criteria for economic policy : how do we tell a good natural resource and environmental policy from a bad one?
ch. 9. Rules of the game : how do they influence efficiency and equity and how can we get them right?
ch. 10. Market failure and inefficiency : what could cause an undesirable market allocation of resources?
ch. 11. Institutional framework : what is the social and legal context for natural resource and environmental decisions and policy?
Part IV. Measuring and comparing benefits and costs of natural resource and environmental policy and projects
ch. 12. Benefit-cost analysis : how do we determine if the benefits of a resource policy outweigh the costs?
ch. 13. Measuring economic value : how do we account for all relevant benefits and costs in natural resource and environmental decisions?
Part V. Optimal management of non-renewable and renewable resources
ch. 14. Exhaustible non-renewable resources : what is the optimal use and management of non-renewable resources : what is the optimal use and management of non-renewable resources over time?
ch. 15. Renewable resources : what is the optimal use and management of renewable resources over time?
Part VI. The economics of air, land, and water resource use and policy
ch. 16. The control of polluting emissions : how can we protect the environment and people from air pollution?
The economics of land : how do land markets work and how do we manage land use?
ch. 18. the economics of water : how is water valued and allocated?
Part VII. Environmental ethics, resource conservation and sustainability, and the future
ch. 19. Understanding sustainability : what can economics tell us about using and manageing resources in a sustainable manner?
ch. 20. Economic and environmental ethics : what are the ethical implications of the economic approach to conservation and preservation and what can we learn from other ethical approaches?
ch. 21. Economic science, economic policy, and doing the best we can : how do we find our way forward?
Part I: Natural Resource and Environmental Policy and Natural Resource Supply and Scarcity -- Part II: Microeconomic Theory Foundations for Production and Consumption -- Part III: Economic Theory and Institutions for Public Policy -- Part IV: Measuring and Comparing Benefits and Costs of Natural Resource and Environmental Policy and Projects -- Part V: Optimal Management of Non-renewable and Renewable Resources -- Part VI: The Economics of Air, Land, and Water Resource Use and Policy -- Part VII: Environmental Ethics, Resource Conservation and Sustainability, and the Future
eng.
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