Free market environmentalism - Factbites
 Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Free market environmentalism


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


Related Topics
Dog

In the News (Sat 2 Jun 12)

  
 Free-market environmentalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Free market environmentalism is an ideology that argues the free market is the best tool to preserve the health and sustainability of the environment.
A related philosophical objection is that free market environmentalism is entirely anthropocentric and ignores the innate value of nature outside of human use of it.
Many free market environmentalists argue that the problem of regulator capture whereby large companies play a large role in setting regulations has created a system where things are far too biased in favor of large companies.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Free_market_environmentalism   (1312 words)

  
 Neoliberal Think Tanks and Free Market Environmentalism
Their books have included Free Market Environmentalism published by the Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy in 1991; Reconciling Economics and the Environment published by the Australian Institute for Public Policy in 1991; and Markets, Resources and the Environment published by the Tasman Institute in 1991.
The market solutions being advocated by neoliberal think tanks provide corporations and private firms with an alternative to restrictive legislation and the rhetoric to make the argument against that legislation in terms that are not obviously self-interested.
The greater proportion of its budget goes on marketing and fund raising, including 35-40 per cent of its budget on public relations.
www.uow.edu.au /arts/sts/sbeder/thinktanks.html   (1450 words)

  
 Environmentalism, Free-Market, by Richard Stroup: The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics: Library of Economics and Liberty
This new interest in free-market environmentalism is somewhat ironic because environmental problems have often been seen as a form of market failure (see Public Goods and Externalities).
For markets to work in the environmental field, as in any other, rights to each important resource must be clearly defined, easily defended against invasion, and divestible (transferable) by owners on terms agreeable to buyer and seller.
Using the market, such groups do not have to convince the majority that their project is desirable, nor do they have to fight the majority in choosing how to manage the site.
www.econlib.org /library/Enc/EnvironmentalismFreeMarket.html   (1776 words)

  
 The Commons Blog - About Free-Market Environmentalism
In the 1970s, free market economists argued that ranchers’ fear of livestock losses would be addressed if those who wanted to reintroduce wolves would agree to compensate ranchers who suffered economic loss due to predators.
In this view, environmental problems arise from “market failures” that produce “externalities.” Government regulation is needed to correct environmental concerns that the market has “failed” to handle because they are “external” to the price signals that regulate marketplace transactions.
These additives are not without their environmental impacts, however, as one reduces one set of emissions at the expense of increasing another, and a second has caused widespread groundwater contamination.
commonsblog.org /about_freemkt.php   (3496 words)

  
 Free-Market Environmentalism
Free market capitalist economics is arguably the most powerful tool ever used by civilization.
As the world's leading exemplar of free market economics, the US has a special obligation to discover effective ways of using the power of market forces to help save the environment.
This is a misconception that results from the fact that every environmental problem results from a conflict between a marketed resource (for example, timber) and a non-marketed resource (for example, scenic beauty).
www.ti.org /faqs.html   (2713 words)

  
 Free market environmentalism
For the past decade or so, the concept of “free market environmentalism” has been sifting through the fabric of the country.
One of the leaders in promoting free market environmentalism is the Political Economy Research Center (PERC).
There may be ways to use this free market approach to address real and perceived agricultural water quality issues — a subject that's got as much to do with the future of cattle production as any other single factor.
beef-mag.com /mag/beef_free_market_environmentalism/index.html   (643 words)

  
 free-market environmentalism
Instead of relying on government alone to mandate environmental progress, they have devised clever ways to use the basic power of markets—the incentive of profit—to effect change.
Some traditional environmentalists worry that market schemes, while sometimes making it easier for polluters to make a profit and still comply with environmental rules, don’t always offer the best solution for specific problems.
Environmental groups and government agencies have both begun to buy water rights from farmers along the Columbia River and other waterways—and leaving that water in the rivers to enhance fish populations.
www.hartford-hwp.com /archives/25b/017.html   (1093 words)

  
 Free Market Environmentalism Explained, an interview with Terry Anderson, by Candice Mayhugh
Markets may not be able to solve everything, but that doesn't mean we should prevent markets from solving what they can.
I think that the attention that Hoover is giving to environmental issues is related to the realization that, for many conservatives, environmentalism has always been an Achilles' heel; in other words, it is commonly believed that to be a conservative means that you must be in favor of destroying the environment to raise incomes.
What most people mean by market failure is a situation where, for one reason or another, people either aren't bearing the full costs of their actions or aren't receiving the full benefits of them.
www.hooverdigest.org /982/anderson_t.html   (1909 words)

  
 Environmental Economics: Free market environmentalism
Free market environmentalism works great when rich people decide to protect the environment.
The Environmental Economics blog is dedicated to the dissemination of economists’ views on current environmental and natural resource issues.
A 71-acre section of 450 million-year-old rock that is believed to be part of the world's oldest coral reef will be preserved and opened to the public, officials announced Tuesday.
www.env-econ.net /2005/10/free_market_env.html   (866 words)

  
 Free Market Environmentalism
Free Market Environmentalism articulates an alternative "vision" by recognizing that man is essentially "self-interested"; this leads to the desire for greater profits.
The primary contribution of Free Market Environmentalism is that it provides any number of these elegant, inexpensive and liberating ideas.
But if the course of American environmentalism is to be changed--and for the sake of the environment and the economy it must be--then opposing ideas and alternative solutions must be clearly and forcefully articulated.
www.acton.org /publicat/randl/review.php?id=150   (743 words)

  
 Business Wire: New Books from Hoover Fellows: ``Free M... @ HighBeam Research
Now, the revised and updated edition of "Free Market Environmentalism" (Palgrave, 2001) is being embraced by people on all sides of the environmental movement.
"When the idea of free market environmentalism was launched in the 1980s, it was considered an oxymoron; today, however, there is hardly an environmentalist who would not concede that markets have a role to play in advancing environmental quality."
The original edition of "Free Market Environmentalism" published in 1991 paired what had heretofore been considered diametric opposites -- environmentalism and the free market.
www.highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?docid=1G1:72057139&refid=ink_tptd_np   (602 words)

  
 MIKE^2: Free market environmentalism
I'll show you a fat cat who is using political clout to escape the discipline of the free market and load his costs on the backs of the public.
The free market is a good thing, we should try it some time.
It's a case where some government intervention is needed to account for externalities, but once the government corrects the price signals with taxes, free markets can finish the job of bringing us to a more green future.
www.ocf.berkeley.edu /~mijurka/archives/000163.html   (478 words)

  
 Free and Green
It’s time to show that, when it comes to energy, a truly free market would be a green market.
In a classic open market, today's wind power technologies are competitive with coal, but leave it in the dust once ecological externalities are factored in.
Critics have consistently cited only one environmental impact — bird kills — and study after study has shown the threat posed by windmills located anywhere outside narrow migratory canyons is virtually nil.
www.motherjones.com /commentary/columns/2004/01/01_203.html   (2049 words)

  
 Free Market Environmentalism - July 18, 2005 - The New York Sun - NY Newspaper
Free Market Environmentalism - July 18, 2005 - The New York Sun - NY Newspaper
Both Toyota and Honda plan to launch marketing campaigns this fall promoting new lines of hybrid cars,which use a combination of combustion engines and electric motors to raise fuel efficiency and reduce emissions.
American manufacturers are also itching for a piece of the hybrid market.
www.nysun.com /article/17146   (245 words)

  
 The Commons Blog - Free-Market Environmentalism Reading List
Free Market Environmentalism (San Francisco: Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy and Westview Press, 1991, Palgrave Macmillan; Revised edition 2001).
Adler, Jonathan H. Environmentalism at the Crossroads: Green Activism in America (Washington, DC: Capital Research Center, 1995).
Water Markets: Priming the Invisible Pump (Washington, DC: Cato Institute, 1997).
commonsblog.org /free_reading.php   (638 words)

  
 Free Market Environmentalism by Terry Anderson
Free market environmentalism is about two things: promoting economic growth that gives us the wealth, the technical capabilities, and the demand to promote environmental quality and using positive incentives to get environmental quality produced.
Free market environmentalism follows this ancient tradition by turning a clean environment and healthy natural resources into economic assets.
On the other side, some producers will argue that leasing federal lands for environmental amenity production will destroy agricultural or logging communities; that endangered species should always take a backseat to jobs and the economy; or that technology-based standards are better because such standards can be manipulated to regulate competitors.
www-hoover.stanford.edu /publications/Selections/973/anderson.html   (729 words)

  
 Free-Market Environmentalism
the inability of free-markets to address environmental concerns), but are rather the result of the absence of market forces.
But these are not caused by market failures (i.e.
Some of them, however, sometimes allow their once negative pessimistic views on environmental matters to be changed by facts, such as Gregg Easterbrook in his A Moment on the Earth.
www.iedm.org /main/show_editorials_en.php?editorials_id=203   (711 words)

  
 ☻ Minnesota Free Market
The Free Market is open to Twin Cities residents and residents of the Minnesota seven-county metropolitan...
The Free Market is a listing service for residents who want to give or get free reusable goods for the home, garage and garden.
Carmelo Anthony scored a season-high 40 points, including a pair of game-sealing free throws with 14 seconds left, to help the Denver Nuggets beat Miami 100-92 on Friday night, sending the Heat to their fourth straight loss.
www.onlinetradingnews.info /onlinetrading/minnesota-free-market   (863 words)

  
 Free-Market Environmentalism
Free-market environmentalism has been a highly successful tool of conservation where it has been applied and its healthy respect for property rights and individual freedom is equally laudable.
Think tanks that support the viability of free-market environmentalism and document the destruction caused by public ownership of resources have also come into existence.
The Nature Conservancy has been an innovator and leader in free-market environmentalism (though unfortunately they also often rely on government to achieve their goals).
www.fff.org /comment/com0303c.asp   (713 words)

  
 Free Market Environmentalism
A New Group Blog on Environmental Policy from a Free-Market Perspective
Markets Don't Fail, We Fail to Have Markets (from Environmental Forum)
Free and Green: A New Approach to Environmental Protection
home.earthlink.net /~jhadler/fme.html   (64 words)

  
 Free Market Environmentalism
Anderson, T.L. & Leal, D.R. (1991) "Free Market Environmentalism", Westview, Boulder.
myweb.tiscali.co.uk /returnticket/faaaaaab.htm   (11 words)

  
 Coyote Blog: More Free Market Environmentalism
Ironically, this win-win environmentalism is being opposed by the Bush administration.
And raspberries to the Bush Administration, who yet again are demonstrating that their lack of dedication to markets and private action.
Individial transferable quotas (ITQs) for fish species promote sustainable fishing; cap-and-trade policies promote efficient, low-cost pollution reduction; user fees at Forest Service and BLM sites help these areas fund their own operations and cater to the needs of users, not politicians; water markets allow for efficient, harmonious allocation of water to its best use.
www.coyoteblog.com /coyote_blog/2005/07/more_free_marke.html   (1173 words)

  
 Laissez Faire Books
This revised edition addresses some of the critiques of free market environmentalism, provides many new examples, and includes two entirely new chapters.
"Through their rigorous scholarship and intellectual integrity, Anderson and Leal make a compelling and provocative case for free market environmentalism that deserves the attention of anyone seriously concerned about the future direction of environmental policy."
The original edition of Leal and Anderson's seminal book published in 1991 introduced the concept of using markets and property rights to protect and improve environmental quality.
www.lfb.com /prodinfo.asp?number=EN8305&variation=&aitem=16&mitem=21   (249 words)

  
 Sharon Beder's Publications
Market forces and the surrender of professional judgement
Sharon Beder, Critique of the Global Project to Privatize and Marketize Energy, Envisioning a Renewable Public Energy System, Korean Labor Social Network on Energy (KLSNE), Seoul, South Korea, June 2005, pp.
Sharon Beder, Environmental Impact Assessment, Ecodate, July 1997, pp.
www.uow.edu.au /arts/sts/sbeder/index.html   (2496 words)

  
 Designing the Future - Newsweek Technology - MSNBC.com
Others may expend their energy fighting for stricter environmental regulations and repeating the mantra "reduce, reuse, recycle." McDonough's vision for the future includes factories so safe they need no regulation, and novel, safe materials that can be totally reprocessed into new goods, so there's no reason to scale back consumption (or lose jobs).
In short, he wants to overhaul the Industrial Revolution—which would sound crazy if he weren't working with Fortune 500 companies and the government of China to make it happen.
Architect, industrial designer and founder of McDonough Braungart Design Chemistry in Charlottesville, Va., he's not your traditional environmentalist.
www.msnbc.msn.com /id/7773650/site/newsweek   (1178 words)

  
 Eco Books Order Form
We offer free shipping on orders of 10 books or more.
The charge is $4.00 for the first book plus $1.00 for each additional book shipped.
www.serve.com /ecobooks/order.htm   (151 words)

  
 Energy Citations Database (ECD) - Energy and Energy-Related Bibliographic Citations
Energy Citations Database (ECD) Document #6679981 - Free market environmentalism
Availability information may be found in the Availability, Publisher, Research Organization, Resource Relation and/or Author (affiliation information) fields and/or via the "Full-text Availability" link.
www.osti.gov /energycitations/product.biblio.jsp?osti_id=6679981   (104 words)

  
 Free Market Environmentalism
The Environmental Policies of Albert Gore Jr Can the EPA Regulate Greenhouse Gases?
Transforming the States into Laboratories of Environmental Policy
Changing Perceptions of Property Rights and Environmental Protection
home.earthlink.net /~jhadler/new.html   (152 words)

  
 PERC - The Property and Environment Research Center- Improving Environmental Quality Through Markets
PERC - The Property and Environment Research Center- Improving Environmental Quality Through Markets
www.perc.org   (59 words)

  
 An Interview with Terry Anderson PERC Executive Director
Now, the pure libertarian free-market environmentalist would probably say, “Well, you know, we’ve privatized all the roads, and then the cars will be accounted for by the owner of the road, etc.” But in between the pure libertarian free-market environmentalism and the pure regulatory environmentalism are such things as tradable emission permits.
Free market environmentalism, by getting government out of the way, can bring the ingenuity of entrepreneurs and individuals to environmental quality.
Terry Anderson : Free Market Environmentalism is an approach to environmental policy that focuses on the simple principle that incentives matter, and it takes it one step further by saying that where possible, private property rights provide the best incentives.
www.ccsindia.org /gw_freemkt.htm   (59 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.