Click to have a closer look
About this book
Contents
Customer reviews
Related titles
About this book
This volume examines, and solves, the paradox of how a country can have effective laws protecting the environment, vigorously enforced, when legislative and administrative powers are divided between two tiers of government.
Contents
Environmental Policymaking: The Constitutional Division of Powers; The Constitutional Division of Powers with Respect to the Environment in the United States by Edward A. Fitzgerald; The Constitutional Division of Powers with Respect to the Environment in Canada by F.L. Morton; The Constitutional Division of Powers with Respect to the Environment in Australia by Cheryl Saunders; Inter-grovernmental Relations and Environmental Protection; Inter-governmental Costs and Co-ordination in US Environmental Protection by John Kincaid; Inter-governmental Relations and the Politics of Environmental Protection in Canada by Grace Skogstad; Thinking Globally and Acting Federally: Inter-governmental Relations and Environmental Protection in Australia by Aynsley Kellow; Environmental Policymaking: The Role of the Courts; The Role of the Courts in the Making and Administration of Environmental Policy in the United States by Kenneth M. Holland; Courts, Tribunals, and the Environment in Canada by Rainer Knopff and J. E. Glenn; Environmental Policymaking in Australia: The Role of the Courts by Georgina Lynch and Brian Galligan.
Customer Reviews