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Pricing the Planet
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22 August 1996
The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, represented an unparalleled opportunity for scientists, economists, planners, energy specialists, and other professionals from around the world to exchange ideas and information. Bringing together the views discussed at the corresponding International Symposium and Exhibit of Environmental Technologies (ECOTECH)—an official event sponsored by the Rio de Janeiro State Secretariat of Industry, Commerce, and Science Technology of Brazil—Pricing the Planet addresses our ecological future and explores alternatives to mainstream solutions.
The contributors emphasize the need for alternatives that are both economically viable and ecologically sound, and challenge the conventional assumptions and assertions found in the work of many economists. Most importantly, Pricing the Planet makes clear the crucial role that both national and international policy plays in successfully achieving balance between economic and ecological goals.
Sustainability: Challenges to Economic Analysis and Policy, by Peter H. May
Consumption Patterns: The Driving Force of Environmental Stress, by Jyoti Parikh
A Tradable Carbon Entitlements Approach to Global Warming Policy: Sustainable Allocations, by Adam Rose and Brandt Stevens
Back-of-the-Envelope Estimates of Environmental Damage Costs in Mexico, by Sergio Margulis
Health Costs Associated with Air Pollution in Brazil, by Ronaldo Serôa da Motta and Ana Paula Fernandes Mendes
Managing the Transition to Sustainable Development: The Role for Economic Incentives, by Thomas H. Tietenberg
Ecological Economics: Creating a Transdisciplinary Science, by Robert Costanza
Carrying Capacity as a Tool of Development Policy: The Ecuadoran Amazon and the Paraguayan Chaco, by Herman Daly
Green Accounting for Sustainable Development, by Peter Bartelmus
Measuring Sustainable Income: The Cases of Mineral and Forest Depletion in Brazil, by Ronaldo Serôa da Motta and Peter H. May