Asia's clean revolution : industry, growth and the environment
著者
書誌事項
Asia's clean revolution : industry, growth and the environment
Greenleaf Pub., 2000
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [251]-266) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The world's environmental future will be determined in significant part by what happens in the rapidly industrialising and urban economies of Asia. The sheer scale of urban population and industrial growth in Asia - from Indonesia to China - and the energy and materials intensive character of the development process constitutes a dark shadow over the region's, and indeed the world's, environment. And yet this challenge is also an opportunity. Precisely because so much of the urban-industrial investment within developing Asia has yet to take place, the opportunity exists to shape a different development future - one that is far less energy, materials and waste intensive.
Asia's Clean Revolution examines the prospects for and pathways to such a new trajectory. The book lays out a path-breaking vision of how developing economies might go beyond environmental regulation and put in place an array of policies and institutions that could integrate environmental, industrial and technological goals. These findings provide important input for negotiators considering climate change on a global scale.
The book approaches the challenge of growth and environment in Asia in a novel way, by identifying six major transformational dynamics under way in the world today, and assessing whether these can be harnessed to the goal of improved environmental performance of industry.
With a set of specially commissioned chapters from the leading authorities in North America and Asia, this ground-breaking book is the first to present concrete policy solutions to the looming crisis driven by large-scale urban-industrial growth in developing Asia.
目次
Preface
Owen Cylke, US-Asia Environmental Partnership and Winrock International, USA, Somporn Kamolsiripichaiporn, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
1. Toward clean shared growth in Asia
David P. Angel, Clark University, USA, Michael T. Rock, Hood College, USA
Tubagus Feridhanusetyawan, Centre for Strategic and International Studies, Indonesia
Part 1: Framing the Issues
David P. Angel and Michael T. Rock
2. Technology and environmental performance: leveraging growth and sustainability
George R. Heaton, Jr, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA
Budy Resosudarmo, Indonesian Government Agency for the Assessment and Application of Technology and University of Indonesia
3. Globalisation and the environment in Asia: linkages, impacts and policy implications
Daniel Esty, Yale Law School and Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, USA
Mari Pangestu and Hadi Soesastro, Centre for Strategic and International Studies, Indonesia
4. Public policies to promote cleaner shared industrial growth in East Asia
Michael T. Rock, Ooi Giok Ling, Institute of Policy Studies, Singapore, and National University of Singapore
Victor Kimm, University of Southern California, USA
5. Industrialising cities and the environment in Pacific Asia: toward a policy framework and agenda for action
Michael Douglass, University of Hawaii, USA, and Ooi Giok Ling
6. Civil society and the future of environmental governance in Asia
Lyuba Zarsky, Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainable Development, USA
Simon S.C. Tay, National University of Singapore
Part 2: Case Studies in Innovation
David P. Angel and Michael T. Rock
7. Putting pressure on polluters: Indonesia's PROPER programme. A case study for the Harvard Institute for International Development 1997 Asia Environmental Economics Policy Seminar
Shakeb Afsah, International Resources Group, USA
Jeffrey R. Vincent, Harvard Institute for International Development, USA
8. Water pollution abatement in Malaysia
Jeffrey R. Vincent
Rozali bin Mohamed Ali, Asset-Holding Berhad, Malaysia
Khalid Abdul Rhaim, Universiti Putra Malaysia
9. Toward more sustainable development: the environment and industrial policy in Taiwan
Michael T. Rock
10. Measuring up: toward a common framework for tracking corporate environmental performance
Daryl Ditz, Environmental Law Institute, USA
Janet Ranganathan, World Resources Institute, USA
Postscript
Melito Salazar, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
Warren Evans, Asian Development Bank, Philippines
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