1 / 10

Environmental Policy

Class 11: Env Policy Making: Process CofC Fall 2010. Environmental Policy. Primary Actors in US Enviro Policy-Making. Government Actors President and Congress : powerful incentives to take on enviro policy issues; key variable is salience of issue (extent public cares about it)

seanna
Télécharger la présentation

Environmental Policy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Class 11: Env Policy Making: Process CofC Fall 2010 Environmental Policy

  2. Primary Actors in US Enviro Policy-Making • Government Actors • President and Congress: powerful incentives to take on enviro policy issues; key variable is salience of issue (extent public cares about it) • Administrators: critical role b/c they implement laws passed by Congress. Based on science/economics, can modify policy goals (e.g. Forest Service, EPA, or BLM) • Judiciary: Fed Cts review agency decision; expanded purview with ‘standing’ in 70s • State & Local Officials: Imp b/c of Federalism, but often focused on econ impacts b/c of need to attract/retain industry (public op is important too) • Non-State Actors • Advocacy Orgs (NGOs): all governance levels: global to local; build broad coalitions • Experts: wide variety (lawyers, scientists, economists); not neutral; make value judgments like everyone else • Media: critical component; cover all aspects (inform, persuade, dictate); policy-makers and media have mutually reinforcing relationship (influence each other).

  3. Climate change Example(Rosenbaum, pp 32-37) • Competing interests • Competing Institutions • Competing Discourses (“Issue framing”) • Competing values • Competing ideologies • All catering to develop policy choices/alternatives and to compete over public perceptions, values, and worldviews (that shape individual action—see our flowchart)

  4. Enviro Policy-Making Process • Agenda Setting: getting problem on subject list • Alternative Formulations: possible solutions to prob • Decision-Making: choosing among alternatives to address prob • Implementation: translating decision into concrete action • Evaluation: assessing those actions for their constituency with a policy’s goals.

  5. General Rules from Policy Process • Legis and Administrative Policy makers generally engage in routine decision-making, avoiding change • Constitutional Constraints • Checks and balances • Federalism • Organized interests—political activism at all levels • Substantial divergence from status quo only when the following “streams” converge: • Government concentration on a particular set of probs—window of opportunity opens • Policy community (experts, media, advocacy groups) initiate and refine proposals • Political events (change in admin or problem) induce change • In absence of convergence of 3 streams  policy makers prefer incremental change or no change. • Incrementalism is “politically seductive” (p42) and results in “policy adjustments at the margins”

  6. Interest Group Politics • Organized interests that affect public policy • Have an increasing role in shaping policy • Access is granted in our political system for lobbying as a central component • Business/Corps are the most fundamental interest group—and most effective • 70% of all interest groups addressing Climate change were business interests (and over $70m spent) in ‘08 • Has a “special relationship with government” because the overall economy health is key to politics • Environmentalism as a “special interest” • Enlarging access • Have re-balanced interest group politics—more influence • But becoming increasing based on donor’s $$ • Narrower issues • Ideology of Enviro: “pluralism is still bounded by general values, attitudes and beliefs” that shapes worldviews in engaging political action

  7. Rosenbaum’s Typology of Environmental Politics • Ideological Mainstream • Pragmatic reformers (Sierra Club, Nat’l Wildlife Fed) • Stress incrementalism • Deep Ecologists—lifestyle transformation • All forms of life have equal claim on existence • Biocentric vs. Anthropocentric • Radical Environmentalism • Active political activism through direct action toward environmental ends • NOTE: Our Typology (institutionalist, mktlibs, bioenviros, social greens) is probably a better construction of approaches to environmental issues or worldviews

  8. Environmental Attitudes • Deprioritize “environment” now, but in future, many Americans see it as a priority • Jamieson, “An American Paradox” • Nichols Institute’s findings—MOST VOTERS: • Believe significant progress has been made on EP • Perceive enviro as “long term issues that did not warrant the same priority as more ‘immediate concerns such as jobs and health care.” • Assume that enviro policies would have a negative economic impacts such as lost jobs and higher taxes. • By 2009, Gallap Poll indicated that for the 1st time in 25yrs, a majority favored protecting econ growth over the environment.

  9. Science in Policy • Distinguishing factor b/w EP and other policy issues  immensely important • Sci data become “weapons” and science becomes a “bastion against critics” • Everyone has values. Enviro issues place scientists into the political fray, in which “impartiality and objectivity, the highest highly esteemed scientific virtues, are severely tested and sometimes fail.” (p68) • Often, policy makers are faced with decision b/w scientifically risky decision and politically risky one.

  10. Enviromental Policy • Essentially, enviro degradation is a 21st C problem resolved according to 18th C rules….[such as] Fundamental instit checks/balances, interest group liberalism, federalism.” (p71) • Explosive growth of federal enviro legislation and the distinct role of science in EP making, add new elements to the fed policy cycle.

More Related