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Coming Clean
Michael E. Kraft | Mark Stephan | Troy D. Abel

Coming Clean

information disclosure and environmental performance

The MIT Press (Mar 15, 2011)
9780262515573
249 pages | 152 x 229 mm | English
Dewey 333.71/4
LC Classification GE180 .K725 2011
LC Control No. 2010015784

Genre

  • General

Subject

  • Disclosure Of Information - United States
  • Environmental Policy - United States - Decision Making
  • Right To Know Laws

Plot

An investigation into the policy effects of requiring firms to disclose information about their environmental performance.Coming Clean is the first book to investigate the process of information disclosure as a policy strategy for environmental protection. This process, which requires that firms disclose information about their environmental performance, is part of an approach to environmental protection that eschews the conventional command-and-control regulatory apparatus, which sometimes leads government and industry to focus on meeting only minimal standards. The authors of Coming Clean examine the effectiveness of information disclosure in achieving actual improvements in corporate environmental performance by analyzing data from the federal government's Toxics Release Inventory, or TRI, and drawing on an original set of survey data from corporations and federal, state, and local officials, among other sources. The authors find that TRI—probably the best-known example of information disclosure—has had a substantial effect over time on the environmental performance of industry. But, drawing on case studies from across the nation, they show that the improvement is not uniform: some facilities have been leaders while others have been laggards. The authors argue that information disclosure has an important role to play in environmental policy—but only as part of an integrated set of policy tools that includes conventional regulation.

Personal

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Added Date Jun 05, 2014 17:18:34
Modified Date Jun 05, 2014 17:18:34

Value

Purchased 2013