schema:description | "内容記述: Part I. General Aspects: 1. David W. Pearce & R. Kerry Turner (1990), 'Environment and the Developing Countries', in Economics of Natural Resources and the Environment, Chapter 22, New York & London: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 342-59; 2. Mohan Munasinghe (1993), 'Environmental Issues and Economic Decisions in Developing Countries', World Development, 21(11), 1729-48; 3. John M. Antle & Gregg Heidebrink (1995), 'Environment and Development: Theory and International Evidence', Economic Development and Cultural Change, 43(3), April, 603-25; 4. Edward B. Barbier (1990), 'Alternative Approaches to Economic-Environmental Interactions', Ecological Economics, 2(1), April, 7-26; 5. Herman E. Daly (1992), 'Developing Economies and the Steady State', in Steady-State Economics, Chapter 7, London: Earthscan Publications, 148-67; 6. Richard B. Norgaard (1984), 'Coevolutionary Development Potential', Land Economics, 60(2), May, 160-73; 7. Iwan J. Azis (1997), 'Linking Pollution and Macroeconomic Variables: An Indonesian Example', in Manas Chatterji & Yang Kaizhong (eds), Regional Science in Developing Countries, Chapter 17, Basingstoke: Macmillan, 243-56, 360-63. Part II. Resource Utilization and Management: 8. David Feeny, Fikret Berkes, Bonnie J. McCay & James M. Acheson (1990), 'The Tragedy of the Commons: Twenty-Two Years Later', Human Ecology, 18(1), March, 1-19; 9. Sverre Grepperud (1996), 'Population Pressure and Land Degradation: The Case of Ethiopia', Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 30(1), January, 18-33; 10. Kanchan Chopra & S.C. Gulati (1997), 'Environmental Degradation and Population Movements: The Role of Property Rights', Environmental and Resource Economics, 9(4), June, 383-408; 11. Mohammad Ferdous Alam, Ishak Haji Omar & Dale Squires (1996), 'Sustainable Resource Use, Economic Development , and Public Regulation: The Multiproduct Gill Net Fishery of Peninsular Malaysia', Environmental and Resource Economics, 7(2), March, 117-32; 12. Ernst Lutz & Herman Daly (1991), 'Incentives, Regulations, and Sustainable Land Use in Costa Rica', Environmental and Resource Economics, 1, 179-94; 13. Theodore Panayotou (1994), 'Conservation of Biodiversity and Economic Development: The Concept of Transferable Development Rights', Environmental and Resource Economics, 4, 91-110. Part III. Valuation and Accounting of Environmental Change: 14. David W. Pearce & Jeremy J. Warford (1993), 'Evaluating Environmental Damage and Benefits', in World without End: Economics, Environment, and Sustainable Development, Chapter 5, Oxford: Oxford University Press and the World Bank, 97-144, references; 15. Robert Repetto, William Magrath, Michael Wells, Christine Beer & Fabrizio Rossini (1992), 'Wasting Assets: Natural Resources in the National Income Accounts', in Anil Markandya & Julie Richardson (eds.), Environmental Economics, Chapter 25, London: Earthscan, 364-88; 16. Salah El Serafy & Ernst Lutz (1989), 'Environmental and Natural Resource Accounting', in Gunter Schramm & Jeremy J. Warford (eds), Environmental Management and Economic Development, Chapter 3, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press for the World Bank, 23-38; 17. John A. Dixon, David E. James & Paul B. Sherman (1989), 'Risk and Uncertainty in Dryland Development and Management', in John A. Dixon, David E. James & Paul B. Sherman (eds), The Economics of Dryland Management, Chapter 8, London: Earthscan, 163-92. Part IV. Environmental Policy Instruments: 18. Gunnar S. Eskeland & Emmanuel Jimenez (1992), 'Policy Instruments for Pollution Control in Developing Countries', World Bank Research Observer, 7(2), July, 145-69; 19. Sujata Gupta & Stephen G. Hall (1996), 'Carbon Abatement Costs: An Integrated Approach for India', Environment and Development Economics, 1(1), February, 41-63; 20. Haynes C. Goddard (1997), 'Using Tradeable Permits to Achieve Sustainability in the World's Large Cities: Policy Design Issues and Efficiency Conditions for Controlling Vehicle Emissions, Congestion and Urban Decentralization with an Application to Mexico City', Environmental and Resource Economics, 10(1), July, 63-99. Part V. Adjustment, Trade and the Environment: 21. Ramon Lopez (1992), 'The Environment as a Factor of Production: The Economic Growth and Trade Policy Linkages', in Patrick Low (ed.). International Trade and the Environment: An Overview, Chapter 9, Discussion Paper 159, Washington, DC: World Bank, 137-55, references; 22. Karl-Goran Maler & Mohan Munasinghe (1996), 'Macroeconomic Policies, Second-Best Theory and the Environment', Environment and Development Economics, 1(2), May, 149-63; 23. J.B. Opschoor & S.M. Jongma (1996), 'Bretton Woods Intervention Programmes and Sustainable Development', Environment and Development Economics, 1(2), May, 183-202. Part VI. Distributional Issues: 24. Partha Dasgupta (1992), 'Population, Resources, and Poverty', Ambio, 21(1), February, 95-101; 25. Ernst Mohr (1996), 'Sustainable Development and International Distribution: Theory and Application to Rainforests', Review of International Economics, 4(2), June, 152-71; 26. Amitrajeet A. Batabyal (1994), 'An Open Economy Model of the Effects of Unilateral Environmental Policy by a Large Developing Country', Ecological Economics, 10(1), May, 221-32; 27. Hamish Main & Stephen Wyn Williams (1994), 'Marginal Urban Environments as Havens for Low-Income Housing: Third World Regional Comparisons', in Hamish Main & Stephen Wyn Williams (eds), Environment and Housing in Third World Cities, Chapter 9, Chichester & New York: John Wiley & Sons, 151-70; 28. Peter Nijkamp & Hans Opschoor (1997), 'Urban Environmental Sustainability: Critical Issues and Policy Measures in a Third-World Context', in Manas Chatterji and Yang Kaizhong (eds), Regional Science in Developing Countries, Chapter 5, Basingstoke: Macmillan, 52-73....(more)" |