Regulating Pollution: A UK and EC Perspective
By (Author) Christopher J Hilson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
26th May 2000
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Pollution and threats to the environment
341.7623
Hardback
288
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 22mm
This work aims to provide a comprehensive picture of UK and EC pollution regulation. It adopts an interdisciplinary approach to regulation, which seeks to move beyond the sociological and economic frameworks within which pollution regulation has typically been analysed in the UK. The UK and EC regulatory systems are examined within the context of "regulatory federalism". The aim of this is to explore how and why regulatory decisions concerning pollution are taken at different levels of a federal regulatory hierarchy. The book begins with a discussion of the essentials of pollution regulation, including traditional economic justifications for regulation and non-economic ones based on environmental ethics. It goes on to examine subsidiarity and the appropriate level for regulation - a particularly topical issue in the light of recent devolution within the UK. Models of regulatory decision-making are then addressed, comparing the rigours of "ecologism" with the cost-benefit based alternative of "economism" and the more participatory style of "republicanism". Other chapters include: a comparison of the various regulatory techniques in terms of the values of accountability, equality, certainty, efficiency and effectiveness; an examination of regulatory enforcement, covering such issues as accountability for enforcement decisions, corporate liability and strict liability; and a critical analysis of the so-called "co-operative approach".
The breadth of reading is impressive, as was the mastery of many of the arguments of the academic literature and the clarity of the presentation. -- Damian Chalmers * Public Law *
A thorough review of methods for delegating state control, he makes it clear that different theories target different ends and processes. Hilsons review of the issues will be useful. -- Joel D. Wolfe * British Politics Group Newsletter *
Chris Hilson is Professor of Law at The University of Reading.