1st Edition

Valuing Nature? Economics, ethics and environment

Edited By John Foster Copyright 1997
    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    The state of the environment is now widely acknowledged as a serious cause for concern. Valuing Nature? argues that responding to this concern by economic valuation of the environment as a consumer good only makes matters worse. The book brings together philosophers, economists and sociologists to put the case for a new and more creative approach to environmental policy. The discussion covers: • the structure of environmental policy-making • the current orthodoxy in environmental economics and its deficiencies • the deeper problems with contingent valuation surveys and cost-benefit analysis for environmental decisions • alternative valuation methods Embracing three disciplines, this book is nevertheless written in a clear, accessible style. It includes chapters by Geoff Hodgson, Clive Spash, Michael Jacobs, Brian Wynne and John O’Neill. Its ground-breaking critique and suggestions will be of great interest both to specialists in the field and to students of the disciplines concerned; it has important messages for anyone concerned with how decisions about the environment are made.

    Introduction: Environmental value and the scope of economics Part I Economics and environmental policy 1 THE ENVIRONMENTAL ‘VALUATION’ CONTROVERSY:OBSERVATIONS ON ITS RECENT HISTORY AND SIGNIFICANCE 2 VALUES AND PREFERENCES IN NEO-CLASSICAL ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS 3 ECONOMICS, ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND THE TRANSCENDENCE OF UTILITARIANISM Part II Environmental value: limits of an economic model 4 RATIONALITY AND SOCIAL NORMS 5 VALUE PLURALISM, INCOMMENSURABILITY AND INSTITUTIONS 6 PRICING THE COUNTRYSIDE: THE EXAMPLE OF TIR CYMEN 7 THE RELATIONS BETWEEN PRESERVATION VALUE AND EXISTENCE VALUE 8 SUBSTITUTABILITY: OR, WHY STRONG SUSTAINABILITY IS WEAK AND ABSURDLY STRONG SUSTAINABILITY IS NOT ABSURD 9 METHODOLOGY AND INSTITUTIONS: VALUE AS SEEN FROM THE RISK FIELD Part III Valuing nature: new directions 10 EXISTENCE VALUE, MORAL COMMITMENTS AND IN-KIND VALUATION 11 ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT WITHOUT ENVIRONMENTAL VALUATION? 12 MULTI-CRITERIA MAPPING: MITIGATING THE PROBLEMS OF ENVIRONMENTAL VALUATION? 13 ENVIRONMENTAL VALUATION, DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND PUBLIC DECISION-MAKING INSTITUTIONS 14 ENVIRONMENT AND CREATIVE VALUE

    Biography

    John Foster has worked in teaching, public sector management and green politics as well as academic research. He is a research fellow at the Centre for the Study of Environmental Change, Lancaster University.