View Thread

US v. European Environmental Policy

  • 1.  US v. European Environmental Policy

    Posted 03-13-2006 05:19
    Kevin,

    why restrict yourself to environmental policy when the difference might,
    could be, probably is... bound into notions of capitalism and the role of
    environment in the state/business/civil society nexus. And indeed that
    difference is exaggerated by the emergence of Chinese and Indian variants
    of caplitalism that do not follow the US model.

    See: Innovation, Global Change and New Capitalism: A Fuzzy Context for
    Business and the Environment, Human Ecology Review, Vol. 11, No. 3, 2004.

    Nigel Roome

    Daniel Janssen Chair of Corportae Social Responsibility? Solvay Business
    School, Free University of Brussels
    University Chair of Sustainable Enterprise and Transformation, Erasmius
    University Rotteram, Netherlands


    > Kevin,
    > some of this might be interesting
    >
    > L�fstedt, R. E., & Vogel, D. 2001. The changing character of regulation: A
    > comparison of Europe and the United States. Risk Analysis, 21(3): 399-405.
    >
    > Vogel, D. 1986. National Styles of Regulation: Environmental Policy in
    > Great Britain and the United States. Ithaca NY, London: Cornell University
    > Press.
    >
    > Vogel, D. 1992. The globalization of business ethics: why America remains
    > different. California Management Review, 35(1): 30-49.
    >
    > Vogel, D. 1998. The globalization of pharmaceutical regulation.
    > Governance-an International Journal of Policy and Administration, 11(1):
    > 1-22.
    >
    > Vogel, D. 2000. Environmental regulation and economic integration. Journal
    > of International Economic Law, 3(2): 265-279.
    >
    > Vogel, D. 2002. Globalization and environmental reform: The ecological
    > modernization of the global economy. Political Science Quarterly, 117(4):
    > 691-693.
    >
    > Vogel, D. 2002. Ships passing in the night: GMO and the politics of risk
    > regulation in Europe and the United States. INSEAD Fontainbleau: Working
    > Paper 2002/34/CMER.
    >
    >
    > dirk
    >
    > ___________________________________________
    >
    > Professor Dirk Matten
    > Chair in Business Ethics
    > Director, Centre for Research into Sustainability (CRIS)
    > School of Management, Royal Holloway
    > University of London
    > Egham, Surrey, TW20 0EX
    > England
    >
    > Email <mailto:dirk.matten@rhul.ac.uk> dirk.matten@rhul.ac.uk
    > Phone +44 1784 414018
    > Fax +44 1784 439854
    > http://www.rhul.ac.uk/Management/cris/index.html
    >
    > -----Original Message-----
    > From: Organizations and the Natural Environment Discussion
    > [mailto:ONE-L@AOMLISTS.PACE.EDU] On Behalf Of Kevin Fletcher
    > Sent: 11 March 2006 20:51
    > To: ONE-L@AOMLISTS.PACE.EDU
    > Subject: Re: US v. Eurpoean Environmental Policy
    >
    >
    > A little help:
    >
    > I'm looking for a few good citations on the differences between US and
    > European environmental public policy, specifically regulatory approaches.
    >
    > Thanks,
    > Kevin
    >
    > --------------------------------------------------------
    > Kevin A. Fletcher
    > Director of Programs & Administration
    > Audubon International
    > 46 Rarick Road, Selkirk, NY 12158
    > Phone: (518)767-9051 ext 26; Fax: (518)767-9076
    > Email: <mailto:kfletcher@auduboninternational.org>
    > kfletcher@auduboninternational.org
    > Website: <http://www.auduboninternational.org/>
    > http://www.auduboninternational.org
    > "Fostering more sustainable human and natural communities--one person, one
    > place at a time."
    > -------------------------------------------------------
    >
    >