You need JavaScript to view this

Regulative environmental policy. Regulative Umweltpolitik

Abstract

Regulative policy means those governmental attempts to steer the course of things which can fall back on a certain repertoire of instruments for actions in order to warrant the causal and temporal connection between the making available and the employment of means. The fact that environmental protection needs regulative policy is substantiated by the thesis that the market has failed; consequently only government can manage the public goods 'environment' in a suitable way, and it is a matter of fact that environmental protection at present is operated preferably via regulative policy. The problems of regulative enviromental policy are manifold. Its implementation often miscarries because of limited administrative resources on the one hand - making sufficient control impossible for instance -, and because of poor quality regulative instruments on the other hand. One way out would be to increase the efficiency of regulative policy by sophisticating judicial techniques. Other ways out point to the executing level and aim at improving implementation strategies or are concerned with post-regulative law. The latter refers to a new legal quality which demonstrates itself already in corporatistical crisis regulation or in induction programs such as pollution limits. A final way out favours deregulation strategies which includes  More>>
Authors:
Goerlitz, A; Voigt, R [1] 
  1. Universitaet der Bundeswehr Muenchen, Neubiberg (Germany, F.R.). Fakultaet fuer Sozialwissenschaften; eds.
Publication Date:
Jan 01, 1991
Product Type:
Book
Reference Number:
DE-91-009432; EDB-91-145840
Resource Relation:
Journal Volume: no. 5; Related Information: Jahresschrift fuer Rechtspolitologie
Subject:
29 ENERGY PLANNING, POLICY AND ECONOMY; POLLUTION ABATEMENT; CHARGES; ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES; ECOLOGY; ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY; FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY; INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS; LEGAL ASPECTS; LICENSES; POLITICAL ASPECTS; POLLUTION LAWS; REGULATIONS; SOCIO-ECONOMIC FACTORS; SOCIOLOGY; DEVELOPED COUNTRIES; EUROPE; GOVERNMENT POLICIES; LAWS; 290300* - Energy Planning & Policy- Environment, Health, & Safety
OSTI ID:
5176054
Country of Origin:
Germany
Language:
German
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ISBN: 3-89085-512-1
Submitting Site:
DE
Size:
Pages: (259 p)
Announcement Date:
May 13, 2001

Citation Formats

Goerlitz, A, and Voigt, R. Regulative environmental policy. Regulative Umweltpolitik. Germany: N. p., 1991. Web.
Goerlitz, A, & Voigt, R. Regulative environmental policy. Regulative Umweltpolitik. Germany.
Goerlitz, A, and Voigt, R. 1991. "Regulative environmental policy. Regulative Umweltpolitik." Germany.
@misc{etde_5176054,
title = {Regulative environmental policy. Regulative Umweltpolitik}
author = {Goerlitz, A, and Voigt, R}
abstractNote = {Regulative policy means those governmental attempts to steer the course of things which can fall back on a certain repertoire of instruments for actions in order to warrant the causal and temporal connection between the making available and the employment of means. The fact that environmental protection needs regulative policy is substantiated by the thesis that the market has failed; consequently only government can manage the public goods 'environment' in a suitable way, and it is a matter of fact that environmental protection at present is operated preferably via regulative policy. The problems of regulative enviromental policy are manifold. Its implementation often miscarries because of limited administrative resources on the one hand - making sufficient control impossible for instance -, and because of poor quality regulative instruments on the other hand. One way out would be to increase the efficiency of regulative policy by sophisticating judicial techniques. Other ways out point to the executing level and aim at improving implementation strategies or are concerned with post-regulative law. The latter refers to a new legal quality which demonstrates itself already in corporatistical crisis regulation or in induction programs such as pollution limits. A final way out favours deregulation strategies which includes the introduction of environmental levies or the allocation of environmental licences. An interdisciplinary discourse is to find out what would happen if these ways were taken. Pointers to solutions from varying scientific disciplines resulting from this discourse are to be found in this volume. (orig./HSCH).}
volume = {no. 5}
place = {Germany}
year = {1991}
month = {Jan}
}