Contaminated Land

Hardback

Contaminated Land

Reclamation, Redevelopment and Reuse in the United States and the European Union

9781858982434 Edward Elgar Publishing
Peter B. Meyer, Professor of Urban Policy and Economics and Director, Centre for Environmental Management, University of Louisville, US, the late Richard H. Williams, formerly Senior Lecturer in Town and Country Planning, and Associate of the Centre for Research in European Urban Environments, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK and Kristen R. Yount, is Assistant Professor of Sociology,Northern Kentucky University, US
Publication Date: 1995 ISBN: 978 1 85898 243 4 Extent: 240 pp
Contaminated land policy is a key concern of governments and policy makers across the globe, yet discussion has traditionally focused on the particular experience of the United States. This major new book develops a framework for assessing laws and regulations regarding contaminated land and polluted properties, their clean up and reuse, and the assignment of costs and responsibilities for reclamation.

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Contents
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Contaminated land policy is a key concern of governments and policy makers across the globe, yet discussion has traditionally focused on the particular experience of the United States. This major new book develops a framework for assessing laws and regulations regarding contaminated land and polluted properties, their clean up and reuse, and the assignment of costs and responsibilities for reclamation.

In Contaminated Land, the authors, a European and two Americans, lay out a framework for cross– national comparisons of policy contexts as well as ways of examining the outcomes of different approaches to contaminated land and systematically compare approaches to this issue in both the EU and US. The use of this framework leads to a reassessment of specific policies, such as the polluter pays principle, which may be more successful in the EU than it has been in the US, and subsidiarity which, while problematic in Europe, may hold promise in a US application. Specific issues discussed include the nature and extent of the contaminated land problem, legal implications, regulation in the US, the 1980 Comprehensive Environmental Liability, Compensation and Reclamation Act, European experience and EU environmental policy, integrated comparative analysis and some lessons for the future.

Contaminated Land offers valuable insights on policy responses to the problem of badly polluted land from the perspectives of planning, economics and sociology. In particular, this volume offers frameworks for comparison of different national settings to help determine the preferred and most promising approaches to contaminated land in any social, economic and legal policy context.
Critical Acclaim
‘Contaminated Land fills an unserved niche in the literature. Few other books are available on this topic. The book is non-technical, and therefore very accessible. It should be successful in addressing its intended audience, which would include government regulators, people interested in the evolution of environmental issues, and scholars doing comparative analysis of policymaking. . . . this book is well worth reading and makes a substantial contribution to the debate and literature on brownfields redevelopment.’
– Robert Simons, Journal of the American Planning Association

‘The book provides the reader with insights on policy responses to the contaminated land problem from the perspectives of planning, economics and sociology. It is comprehensive without sacrificing clarity or brevity in what can be a complex subject area.’
– Amelia Craighill, The Economic Journal
Contents
Contents: Introduction 1. The Contaminated Land Problem 2. Dimensions of National Contaminated Land Policy Contexts 3. The Emergence of Environmental Concern and Toxics Policy in the United States 4. The CERCLA Experience and Debates over Change 5. The European Context and European Union Environmental Policy 6. Contaminated Land Policy in the European Union and its Member-States 7. Comparisons and Contrasts: Integrated Comparative Analysis 8. Lessons for Future Contaminated Land Policy: Prospects and Pitfalls
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