Emissions Trading Bibliography
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ETEI Bibliography
  Acid Rain
Global Climate Change
State and Regional Initiatives (RECLAIM, etc.)
Spatial Issues and Trading Rules
Implementation Experience
Bibliography Main Page
Implementation Experience
  Ben-David, S., D. Brookshire, et al. (1999). "Heterogeneity, Irreversible Production Choices, and Efficiency in Emissions Permit Markets." Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 38(2): 176-194.

Bodily, S. E. and H. L. Gabel (1982). "A New Job for Businessmen: Managing the Company's Environmental Resources." Sloan Management Review 23(4): 3-18.

Carlin, A. (1992). The United States Experience With Economic Incentives to Control Environmental Pollution. Washington, DC, U. S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Committee for Economic Development (1993). What Price Clean Air? A Market Approach to Energy and Environmental Policy. Washington, DC, Committee for Economic Development.

del Calvo y Gonzales, J. A. (1981). "Markets in Air: Problems and Prospects of Controlled Trading." Harvard Environmental Law Review 5: 377-430.

Devlin, R. A. and R. Q. Grafton (1996). "Marketable Emission Permits - Efficiency, Profitability and Substitutability." Canadian Journal Of Economics 29(SI): S260-S264.

Dudek, D. J. and J. Palmisano (1988). "Emissions Trading: Why is this Thoroughbred Hobbled?" Columbia Journal of Environmental Law 13(2): 217-56.

Farrell, A., R. Carter, and R. Raufer (1999). "The NOx Budget: Market-Based Control of Tropospheric Ozone in the Northeastern United States" Resource and Energy Economics 21(2): 103-124.

Hahn, R. W. and G. L. Hester (1989). "Marketable Permits: Lessons from Theory and Practice." Ecology Law Quarterly 16: 361-406.

Hahn, R. W. and G. L. Hester (1989). "Where Did All the Markets Go? An Analysis of EPA's Emission Trading Program." Yale Journal of Regulation 6(1): 109-153.

Hall, J. V. and A. L. Walton (1996). "A Case Study in Pollution Markets: Dismal Science vs. Dismal Reality." Contemporary Economic Policy XIV(2): 67-78.

Hanley, N., S. Hallett, et al. (1990). "Research Policy Review 33: Why Is More Notice Not Taken of Economists' Prescriptions for the Control of Pollution?" Environment and Planning A 22(11): 1421-1439.

Joskow, P. L., R. Schmalensee, et al. (1998). "The Market for Sulfur Dioxide Emissions." The American Economic Review 88(4): 669-685. 

Klaassen, G. and A. Nentjes (1997). "Creating Markets for Air Pollution Control in Europe and the USA." Environmental & Resource Economics 10(2): 125-146.

Kling, C. L. (1994). "Environmental Benefits from Marketable Discharge Permits or an Ecological vs. Economical Perspective on Marketable Permits." Ecological Economics 11(1): 57-64.

Levin, M. H. (1982). Getting There: Implementing the 'Bubble' Policy. Social Regulation: Strategies for Reform. E. Bardarch and R. A. Kagan. San Francisco, California, ICS Press.

Levin, M. H. (1985). "Statutes and Stopping Points: Building a Better Bubble at E.P.A." Regulation 9(3): 33-42.

Liroff, R. A. (1980). Air Pollution Offsets: Trading, Selling and Banking. Washington, D.C., Conservation Foundation.

Liroff, R. A. (1986). Reforming Air Pollution Regulation: The Toil and Trouble of EPA's Bubble. Washington D.C., Conservation Foundation.

McCann, R. J. (1996). "Environmental Commodities Markets: 'Messy' versus 'Ideal' Worlds." Contemporary Economic Policy 14(3): 85-97.

Meidinger, E. E. (1985). "On Explaining the Development of 'Emissions Trading' in U. S. Air Pollution Regulation." Law and Policy 7(4): 447-480.

National Academy of Public Administration (1994). The Environment Goes to Market: The Implementation of Economic Incentives for Pollution Control. Washington, D.C., National Academy of Public Administration.

OECD (1989). Economic Instruments for Environmental Protection. Paris, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Pelkeny, D. M. (1993). "Emissions Trading: Applications to Water and Air Quality." Pollution Prevention Review 3: 139-48.

Stavins, R. N. (1998). "What Can We Learn from the Grand Policy Experiment? Lessons from SO2 Allowance Trading." The Journal of Economic Perspectives 12(3): 69-88.

Seroa Da Motta, R., G. D. Liebcap, et al. (1999). "Market-Based Instruments for Environmental Policymaking in Latin America and the Caribbean: Lessons from Eleven Countries." Environment and Development Economics 4(2): 177-201.

Svendsen, G. T. (1998). Public Choice and Environmental Regulation: Tradable Permits Systems in the United States and CO2 Taxation in Europe (Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar)

Tietenberg, T. H. (1985). Emissions Trading: An Exercise in Reforming Pollution Policy. Washington, DC, Resources for the Future.

Tietenberg, T. H. (1986). Uncommon Sense: The Program to Reform Pollution Control Policy. Regulatory Reform: What Actually Happened. L. W. Weiss and M. W. Klass. Boston, Little Brown and Company: 269-303.

Tietenberg, T. H. (1989). Marketable Permits in the U.S.: A Decade of Experience. Public Finance and the Performance of Enterprises. K. W. Roskamp. Detroit, MI, Wayne State University Press: 261-277.

Tietenberg, T. H. (1990). "Economic Instruments for Environmental Regulation." Oxford Review of Economic Policy 6(1): 17-33.

Tietenberg, T. H. (1992). Relevant Experience with Tradable Permits. Combating Global Warming: Study on a Global System of Tradable Carbon Emission Entitlements. U. N. C. o. T. a. Development. New York, United Nations: 37-54.

Tietenberg, T. H. (1998). "Ethical Influences on the Evolution of the US Tradable Permit Approach to Pollution Control." Ecological Economics 24(2-3): 241-257.

Vivian, W. and W. Hall (1979). An Empirical Examination of U.S. Market Trading in Air Pollution Offsets. Institute of Public Policy Studies, University of Michigan.

Zerlauth, A. and U. Schubert (1999). "Air Quality Management Systems in Urban Regions: An Analysis of RECLAIM in Los Angeles and its Transferability to Vienna." Cities 16(4): 269-283.

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