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OverviewThe United States in recent years has been abandoning its historical role as a leader in environmental regulation. At the same time, the European Union, spurred by political integration, has enacted many new environmental laws and assumed a leadership role in promoting global environmental sustainability. Green Giants?, one of the most detailed comparisons of the environmental policies of America and Europe yet undertaken, looks at current policy trends in the United States and the European Union - the two largest economic actors in the world - and the implications they have for future transatlantic and global co-operation. he contributors - leading European and American scholars and practitioners - examine similarities and differences in specific policy areas in order to assess whether United States and European Union policies are diverging, pursuing similar goals and methods, or undergoing a ""hybridisation"" through joint learning and exchanges. They find that although European and American policies may parallel each other somewhat in domestic regulation, they are clearly diverging in the ""third generation"" of environmental concerns. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Norman J. Vig , Michael Gebert Faure (Inst Transnational Legal Res) , Michael E. Kraft (University of Wisconsin-Green Bay) , Sheldon Kamieniecki (University of California)Publisher: MIT Press Ltd Imprint: MIT Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.544kg ISBN: 9780262720441ISBN 10: 0262720442 Pages: 414 Publication Date: 19 March 2004 Recommended Age: From 18 years Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Unknown Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsReviews"""An innovative and important comparison of environmental policymaking that sheds much light on the policy differences of the U.S. and the E.U. and on how policymakers can more fruitfully learn from the experiences of others in designing more effective environmental policies. The book provides a very interesting look at how policies converge in some areas, diverge in others, and why those differences and similarities occur.""--Gary C. Bryner, Department of Political Science, Brigham Young University ""This book raises the intriguing question of whether the world's two richest economies--the United States and the European Union--are following increasingly divergent paths on environmental policy, and points to the need for a new transatlantic partnership in this vital area. Everyone concerned about America's faltering environmental leadership should read this book."" The Honorable Timothy E. Wirth, President, The United Nations Foundation ""We cannot make progress on global environmental issues if we fail to understand the differences in approach between the United States and Europe. This volume not only sheds light on how we converge and diverge, but also offers us a little hope--that if we share information, analysis, and experience, a hybrid approach that draws on the best each side has to offer may emerge and provide a way forward."" Eileen Claussen, President, The Pew Center on Global Climate Change ""At a time of severe strains in the transatlantic partnership, Vig and Faure's *Green Giants?* poses a vitally important question: Are US and European approaches to environmental politics converging or diverging? The book's case studies are careful and methodical, covering a range of issue-areas from climate change to the regulation of genetically modified organisms, and the editors assess the prospects for either transatlantic conflict or joint leadership across these various issues.""--Mark A. Pollack, Department of Political Science, University of Wisconsin -- Madison ""We cannot make progress on global environmental issues if we fail to understand the differences in approach between the United States and Europe. This volume not only sheds light on how we converge and diverge, but also offers us a little hope -- that if we share information, analysis, and experience, a hybrid approach that draws on the best each side has to offer may emerge and provide a way forward.""--Eileen Claussen, President, The Pew Center on Global Climate Change ""This book raises the intriguing question of whether the world's two richest economies -- the United States and the European Union -- are following increasingly divergent paths on environmental policy, and points to the need for a new transatlantic partnership in this vital area. Everyone concerned about America's faltering environmental leadership should read this book.""--Timothy E. Wirth, President, The United Nations Foundation" This book raises the intriguing question of whether the world's two richest economies--the United States and the European Union--are following increasingly divergent paths on environmental policy, and points to the need for a new transatlantic partnership in this vital area. Everyone concerned about America's faltering environmental leadership should read this book. --The Honorable Timothy E. Wirth, President, The United Nations Foundation An innovative and important comparison of environmental policymaking that sheds much light on the policy differences of the US and the EU and on how policymakers can more fruitfully learn from the experiences of others in designing more effective environmental policies. The book provides a very interesting look at how policies converge in some areas, diverge in others, and why those differences and similarities occur. --Gary C. Bryner, Department of Political Science, Brigham Young University We cannot make progress on global environmental issues if we fail to understand the differences in approach between the United States and Europe. This volume not only sheds light on how we converge and diverge, but also offers us a little hope--that if we share information, analysis, and experience, a hybrid approach that draws on the best each side has to offer may emerge and provide a way forward. --Eileen Claussen, President, The Pew Center on Global Climate Change An innovative and important comparison of environmental policymaking that sheds much light on the policy differences of the U.S. and the E.U. and on how policymakers can more fruitfully learn from the experiences of others in designing more effective environmental policies. The book provides a very interesting look at how policies converge in some areas, diverge in others, and why those differences and similarities occur. --Gary C. Bryner, Department of Political Science, Brigham Young University This book raises the intriguing question of whether the world's two richest economies--the United States and the European Union--are following increasingly divergent paths on environmental policy, and points to the need for a new transatlantic partnership in this vital area. Everyone concerned about America's faltering environmental leadership should read this book. The Honorable Timothy E. Wirth, President, The United Nations Foundation We cannot make progress on global environmental issues if we fail to understand the differences in approach between the United States and Europe. This volume not only sheds light on how we converge and diverge, but also offers us a little hope--that if we share information, analysis, and experience, a hybrid approach that draws on the best each side has to offer may emerge and provide a way forward. Eileen Claussen, President, The Pew Center on Global Climate Change At a time of severe strains in the transatlantic partnership, Vig and Faure's *Green Giants?* poses a vitally important question: Are US and European approaches to environmental politics converging or diverging? The book's case studies are careful and methodical, covering a range of issue-areas from climate change to the regulation of genetically modified organisms, and the editors assess the prospects for either transatlantic conflict or joint leadership across these various issues. --Mark A. Pollack, Department of Political Science, University of Wisconsin -- Madison We cannot make progress on global environmental issues if we fail to understand the differences in approach between the United States and Europe. This volume not only sheds light on how we converge and diverge, but also offers us a little hope -- that if we share information, analysis, and experience, a hybrid approach that draws on the best each side has to offer may emerge and provide a way forward. --Eileen Claussen, President, The Pew Center on Global Climate Change This book raises the intriguing question of whether the world's two richest economies -- the United States and the European Union -- are following increasingly divergent paths on environmental policy, and points to the need for a new transatlantic partnership in this vital area. Everyone concerned about America's faltering environmental leadership should read this book. --Timothy E. Wirth, President, The United Nations Foundation Author InformationNorman J. Vig is Winifred and Atherton Bean Professor of Science, Technology, and Society, Emeritus, at Carleton College. Michael G. Faure is Professor of Comparative and International Environmental Law at Maastricht University and Academic Director of the Maastricht European Institute for Transnational Legal Research. Michael E. Kraft is Professor of Political Science and Public Affairs Emeritus and Herbert Fisk Johnson Professor of Environmental Studies Emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. Sheldon Kamieniecki is Dean of the Division of Social Sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He is the author or editor of many other books. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |