Courses:

Environmental Politics and Policy >> Content Detail



Calendar / Schedule



Calendar





CLASS #TOPICSREADINGSREADING QUESTIONSASSIGNMENTS
Part I: The Environment as a "Problem"
1Introduction to Environmental Politics and Policy
2

A Brief 300 Year History of American Environmentalism (PDF)

This introduction to the course reviews the evolution of environmentalism in the U.S. since the colonial era.

Required Reading (40 pages):

Switzer. Environmental Politics. Pp. 1-32.

Muir, John. "Hetch Hetchy Valley."

Pinchot, Gifford. "Principles of Conservation."

Recommended Reading:

Kraft, Michael E., and Norman J Vig. "Environmental Policy from the 1970s to 2000."

Study Questions
3 and 4

The Environmental Impact of Human Activity: Is there a Problem? (PDF)

We begin with a very basic question: How severe are the environmental problems we are facing? Is the earth facing a looming environmental catastrophe? These authors believe we are approaching a planetary crisis.

Required Reading (100 pages):

Meadows, et al. "The Nature of Exponential Growth."

Hardin. "The Tragedy of the Commons."

Arrow, et al. "Economic Growth, Carrying Capacity, and the Environment."

Perhaps we have passed the peak of the environmental crisis. Are we already well on the way to balancing environmental, economic, and societal needs?

Simon, and Kahn. "Introduction to the Resourceful Earth."
 
Easterbrook. "The Ecorealist Manifesto."
 
Ehrlich, and Ehrlich. "Wise Use and Anti-Environmental Science."

Switzer. Environmental Politics. Pp. 273-294.
 
Links: Explore the concept of "ecological footprints" and calculate your own. Visit: http://www.rprogress.org/

Recommended Reading:
 
Baden, John, and Douglass Noonan. Managing the Commons.
This is an interesting critique of the "Tragedy of the Commons" thesis and suggested free-market solutions.
 
Ostrom, Elenor. Governing the Commons
A strong critique of Hardin's thesis.
 
Population Action International. People in Balance.
An interesting summary of the population-environment problem looking at water, forests, agriculture and pollution. Useful data and graphics. [Click the title to jump to the web page for the full text.]

Easterbrook, Gregg. A Moment on Earth.

Study QuestionsPaper #1 Assigned
5

The Institutional Setting of U.S. Environmental Policy (PDF)

Who are the key players in environmental policymaking? How does the environmental policymaking process work?

Required Reading (81 pages):

Switzer. Environmental Politics. Pp. 35-92.

Layzer. "Introduction." In The Environmental Case. Pp. 1-24.

Recommended Reading:

Vig, Norman J. "Presidential Leadership and the Environment: From Reagan to Clinton."

Kraft, Michael E. "Environmental Policy in Congress: From Consensus to Gridlock."

McSpadden, Lettie. "Environmental Policy and the Courts."

Study QuestionsPaper #1 Due
Part II: 1970-1980: Let the Government Do It!
6

Legislating Clean Air (PDF 1) (PDF 2)

The government had to do something about America's unbreathable air. And it did: the Clean Air Act of 1970. Congress set air standards, set deadlines, and ordered the air to be cleansed.

This class examines the driving forces behind the rise of environmental legislation that poured out of the Congress beginning in 1970s. The legislative surge in American environmentalism--the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act in particular--ushered in an era of "command and control" regulation setting the stage for political conflict between private enterprise and the public interest.

Required Reading (80 pages):

Layzer. "The Nation Tackles Pollution: The EPA and the Clean Air and Water Acts." In The Environmental Case. Pp. 25-51.

Schmandt, Jurgen. "Regulation and Science," Science, Technology, and Human Values."

Bartlett. "Rationality and the Logic of the National Environmental Policy Act."

Switzer. Environmental Politics. Pp. 189-212, 311-316.

Legislation Link: Clean Air Act.

Recommended Reading:

Portney, Paul R. "The Evolution of Federal Regulation."

Greve, and Smith. Environmental Politics: Public Costs, Private Rewards. Chap. 2.

Torgerson. "Limits of the Administrative Mind."

Study Questions
7

Commanding Clean Water (PDF)

The Clean Water Act of 1972 was supposed to make all the waters of the U.S. clean by 1985. What happened and why?

Congress, concerned that government environmental agencies might become "captive" of the very industries they were supposed to monitor and regulate, put citizen enforcement provisions in the Clean Water Act. Quickly, environmental litigators and the courts became major players in environmental policy.

Required Reading (30 pages):

Switzer. Environmental Politics. Pp. 159-188.

Greve, Michael. "Private Enforcement, Private Rewards: How Environmental Citizen Suits Became an Entitlement Program."

Legislation Link: Clean Water Act.

Recommended Reading:

Freeman, A. Myrick, III. "Water Pollution Policy."

Study Questions
8Re-Write of Paper #1 Due
9

The Slippery Slope of Environmental Protection: The Case of Wetlands (PDF)

This class explores how the reach of a law can expand beyond what its original creators intended. We look at how a series of court cases broadened the jurisdiction of the Clean Water Act and forced the US Army Corps of Engineers to protect wetlands--and then two decades later forced it to "unprotect" them.

Required Reading:

Federal District Court Case: United States v Holland (No. 73-623 (M.D. Fla. March 27, 1974.)

Supreme Court Case: United States v Riverside Bayview Homes (No. 84-703, December 4, 1985.)

Supreme Court Case: Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County, Petitioner v. United States Army Corps of Engineers, et al. (No. 99-1178, January 9, 2001.) (PDF)

Williams, Ted. "Who can Save a Wetland?"

Study Questions
10

Endangered Species and Biodiversity (PDF)

Americans have always had a schizophrenic "environmental" attitude toward wildlife and the landscape. An unstable mix of values:--romanticism, utilitarianism, dominionism (fear), and liberty (common property ownership)--has made preservation and protection of America's natural landscape a policy rife with internal contradictions, reversals, and too-little too-late reactions.

The Endangered Species Act (1973) suggests that American policy-makers were prepared to make tough decisions favoring biodiversity over the economy. Was this true? And if so, how do we explain it?

We also explore the role of the courts in environmental policy making.

Required Reading (37 pages):

Wilson, E. O. "The Current State of Biological Diversity."

Mann, Charles, and Plummer. "The Awful Beast is Back."

Supreme Court Case: TVA v. Hill. (No. 76-1701, June 15, 1978.)

Legislation Link: Endangered Species Act.

Recommended Reading:

Leopald, Aldo. "Thinking Like A Mountain."

Kellert, Stephen. The Value of Life. Chap. 2 and 3, pp. 9-63.

11

Of Toxic Wastes and Government Failure (PDF)

This lecture examines how mass politics extended the environmental mandate, bringing about stringent regulations and standards for hazardous waste control. What mobilizes public participation in environmental policy and how does that participation affect policy? How does the public grapple with complex scientific and technical issues? How do government and media organizations respond to public pressures?

Required Reading (84 pages):

Layzer. "Love Canal: Hazardous Wastes and the Politics of Fear." In The Environmental Case. Pp 52-77.

Switzer. Environmental Politics. Pp. 113-138.

Downs, Anthony. "Up and Down with Ecology: The Issue-Attention Cycle."

Recommended Reading:

Greve, and Smith. Environmental Politics: Public Costs, Private Rewards. Chap. 4.

Layzer. "Government Secrets at Rocky Flats." In The Environmental Case. Pp. 78-101.

Part III: 1980-1991: Anti-Environmental Backlash
12

The Reagan Revolution: Rethinking Environmental Policy (PDF)

The Reagan administration comes to power critical of "big government" in general and government regulation in particular--especially environmental regulation. Arguing that environmental regulation was hobbling the economy the administration tried to dismantle the environmental framework that had been established the previous decade. One of its more lasting efforts was to require cost-benefit analysis for environmental regulations.

Required Reading:

Whittington, Dale, and W. Norton Grubb. "Economic Analysis in Regulatory Decisions."

Farrow, Scott, and Michael Toman. "Using Cost-Benefit Analysis to Improve Environmental Regulations."

Responses to Farrow and Toman by:

Eads, George. Environment 41, 4: 4.
Lave, Lester. Environment 41, 4: 4.
Farrow, and Toman. 41, 4: 45.

Grunwald, Michael. "How Corps Turned Doubt Into a Lock."

13

Regulatory Reform and Economic Tools (PDF)

General dissatisfaction with big government and the seeming stagnation of environmental policy opens the door for advocates of economic mechanisms to guide environmental policy choices. Markets, taxes, subsidies, etc. can be employed to elicit voluntary environmentalism.

Required Reading (69 pages):

Layzer. "Market-based Solutions: Acid Rain and the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990." Chap. 11 in The Environmental Case. Pp. 264-288.

Anderson, and Leal. "Visions of the Environment and Rethinking the Way We Think."

Mitchell, and Simmons. "Political Pursuit of Private Gain: Environmental Goods."

Goodin, Robert E. "Selling Environmental Indulgences."

Recommended Reading:

Freeman, A. Myrick, III. "Economics, Incentives, and Environmental Regulation."

Greve, and Smith. Environmental Politics: Public Costs, Private Rewards. Chap. 2 and 5.

Weber, Edward. "Assuring Reductions in Acid Rain: The Case of Government Imposed Markets."

Paper #2 Due
14

Environmental Equity and Justice (PDF)

There can be no doubt that 30 years of environmental policy has lessened the pollution burden on the nation, slowed the loss of ecological communities and species, and improved our quality of life. But not all Americans have benefited equally. Some Americans--minorities and the poor, in particular--may have enjoyed no benefit at all. Is this "unfair" distribution of environmental benefits just an artifact of policy or does it reflect racial and class biases in our society?

Required Reading (39 pages):

First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit. "Principles of Environmental Justice."

Bullard. "Anatomy of Environmental Racism."

Krauss. "Women of Color on the Front Line."

Friedman, David. "The Environmental Racism Hoax."

Recommended Reading:

Rinquist, Evan J. "Environmental Justice: Normative Concerns and Empirical Evidence."

15 and 16

Environmental Protection and Wise Use of Public Lands (PDF)

This lecture explores the rise of anti-environmentalism in the western revolt against federal control of public lands and its spill over to environmental policy in the rest of the country. It investigates relationships among the Presidency, Congress, federal agencies, and interest groups and how those relationships determine public lands policy.

Focus on the collision between public and private interests and values.

Required Reading (93 pages):

Layzer. "Federal Grazing Policy: Some Things Never Change." Chap. 6 in The Environmental Case. Pp. 127-154.

Layzer. "Jobs vs. the Environment: Saving the Northern Spotted Owl." Chap. 7 in The Environmental Case. Pp. 155-182.

Switzer. Environmental Politics. Pp. 93-112, 243-272.

Study Questions
Part IV: 1992-2002: More Questions Than Answers
17

Risk Assessment and the Public's Right to Know (PDF)

Risk assessment is an important tool in environmental policymaking. We examine its use in providing safe drinking water. We look at how public information and collaborative/voluntary approaches can reduce environmental risks and improve environmental quality.

Required Reading:

Arsenic Rule Benefits Analysis: An SAB Review.

Putnam, Susan W., and Jonathan Baert Wiener. "Seeking Safe Drinking Water."

Recommended Reading:

Schleicher, David. "How Does Science Matter?"

Andrews, Richard N. L. "Risk-Based Decision-Making."

Lee. "The Columbia River Basin: Experimenting with Sustainability."

18

Property Rights and Suburban Sprawl (PDF)

This class focuses on suburban "sprawl" and its impacts on landscape: development, habitat fragmentation, etc.

Required Reading:

Sierra Club. Sprawl: The Dark Side of the American Dream.

Layzer. "Backlash: Wise Use, Property Rights and the Anti-Environmental Movement." Chap. 10 in The Environmental Case. Pp. 238-263.

Supreme Court Cases:

  • Babbit v. Sweethome (94-859, June 29, 1995.)
  • Palazzolo v. Rhode Island, et al. Certiorari to the Supreme Court of Rhode Island (No.99 -2047, June 28, 2001.) (PDF)
  • Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council, Inc., et al., v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, et al. (No. 00-1167) (PDF)

Recommended Reading:

Stoel, Thomas B., Jr. "Reining in Urban Sprawl."

19

Community-Based Environmental Protection

To this point our discussions have looked at environmental policy as conceived and implemented by national and state governments. Some argue that the "next wave" of progress in environmental policy will be place-based local environmentalism.

Required Reading:
Sabel, et al. http://bostonreview.net/BR24.5/sabel.html.

Layzer. "Local Collaboration & Compromise: Using Habitat Conservation Plans to Save Southern California's Endangered Landscape." Chap. 13 in The Environmental Case. Pp. 319-347.

Recommended Reading:

Knopman, Debra S., Megan M. Susman, and Marc K. Landy. "Civic Environmentalism."

Sagoff. "The Allocation and Distribution of Resources."

Paehlke. "Environmental Values for a Sustainable Society."

Ophuls, and Boyan. "The American Political Economy."

Harrison, Kathyrn. "Talking with the Donkey: Cooperative Approaches to Environmental Protection."

20

Comparing Environment Policymaking Around the World (PDF)

For the past few months we have looked at how institutions, interest groups, elected officials, etc. define and shape solutions to US environmental problems. In this lecture we look briefly at other countries and their experience with acid rain. We consider whether different political institutions result in different outcomes, or if cultural, economic, or demographic factors are more important for explaining differences among national environmental policies.

Required Reading:

McCormick, John. "Acid Politics." [Skim]

------. "Britain."

Boehmer-Christiansen, Sonja, and Jim Skea. "Government, Politics and Environmental Policy-making."

------. "Forests and Power: German Precaution."

21 and 22

Energy and the Environment (PDF)

Cheap energy drives the American economy; indeed, it drives the global economy. But cheap energy carries a heavy environmental price tag. Extracting fossil fuels despoils the landscape. Burning fossil fuels pollutes the air. Hydropower devastates river ecology, while nuclear power leaves deadly wastes behind. How do we decide these tradeoffs?

Required Reading (42 pages):

Switzer. Environmental Politics. Pp. 139-158.

Congressional Research Service. IB90122 - Automobile and Light Truck Fuel Economy: The CAFE Standards. [Save and read the PDF report]

Layzer. "Oil versus the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge." Chap. 5 in The Environmental Case. Pp. 102-126.

Recommended Reading:

Sustainable Economics.

World Commission. "From One Earth to One World."

Lafferty. "The Politics of Sustainable Development."

Daly. "Sustainable Gro
 







© 2017 Coursepedia.com, by Higher Ed Media LLC. All Rights Reserved.