Regulating from Nowhere: Environmental Law and the Search for Objectivity
Drawing insight from a diverse array of sources — including moral philosophy, political theory, cognitive psychology, ecology, and science and technology studies — Douglas Kysar offers a new theoretical basis for understanding environmental law and policy. He exposes a critical flaw in the dominant policy paradigm of risk assessment and cost-benefit analysis, which asks policymakers to, in essence, "regulate from nowhere.” As Kysar shows, such an objectivist stance fails to adequately motivate ethical engagement with the most pressing and challenging aspects of environmental law and policy, which concern how we relate to future generations, foreign nations, and other forms of life. Indeed, world governments struggle to address climate change and other pressing environmental issues in large part because dominant methods of policy analysis obscure the central reasons for acting to ensure environmental sustainability. To compensate for these shortcomings, Kysar first offers a novel defense of the precautionary principle and other commonly misunderstood features of environmental law and policy. He then concludes by advocating a movement toward environmental constitutionalism in which the ability of life to flourish is always regarded as a luxury we can afford.
1112547167
Regulating from Nowhere: Environmental Law and the Search for Objectivity
Drawing insight from a diverse array of sources — including moral philosophy, political theory, cognitive psychology, ecology, and science and technology studies — Douglas Kysar offers a new theoretical basis for understanding environmental law and policy. He exposes a critical flaw in the dominant policy paradigm of risk assessment and cost-benefit analysis, which asks policymakers to, in essence, "regulate from nowhere.” As Kysar shows, such an objectivist stance fails to adequately motivate ethical engagement with the most pressing and challenging aspects of environmental law and policy, which concern how we relate to future generations, foreign nations, and other forms of life. Indeed, world governments struggle to address climate change and other pressing environmental issues in large part because dominant methods of policy analysis obscure the central reasons for acting to ensure environmental sustainability. To compensate for these shortcomings, Kysar first offers a novel defense of the precautionary principle and other commonly misunderstood features of environmental law and policy. He then concludes by advocating a movement toward environmental constitutionalism in which the ability of life to flourish is always regarded as a luxury we can afford.
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Regulating from Nowhere: Environmental Law and the Search for Objectivity

Regulating from Nowhere: Environmental Law and the Search for Objectivity

by Douglas A. Kysar
Regulating from Nowhere: Environmental Law and the Search for Objectivity

Regulating from Nowhere: Environmental Law and the Search for Objectivity

by Douglas A. Kysar

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Overview

Drawing insight from a diverse array of sources — including moral philosophy, political theory, cognitive psychology, ecology, and science and technology studies — Douglas Kysar offers a new theoretical basis for understanding environmental law and policy. He exposes a critical flaw in the dominant policy paradigm of risk assessment and cost-benefit analysis, which asks policymakers to, in essence, "regulate from nowhere.” As Kysar shows, such an objectivist stance fails to adequately motivate ethical engagement with the most pressing and challenging aspects of environmental law and policy, which concern how we relate to future generations, foreign nations, and other forms of life. Indeed, world governments struggle to address climate change and other pressing environmental issues in large part because dominant methods of policy analysis obscure the central reasons for acting to ensure environmental sustainability. To compensate for these shortcomings, Kysar first offers a novel defense of the precautionary principle and other commonly misunderstood features of environmental law and policy. He then concludes by advocating a movement toward environmental constitutionalism in which the ability of life to flourish is always regarded as a luxury we can afford.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780300163308
Publisher: Yale University Press
Publication date: 06/22/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Douglas Kysar is Professor of Law at Yale Law School.

Table of Contents

Preface ix

Introduction 1

Part 1 Regulating From Nowhere

1 Agency and Optimality 25

2 Prescription and Precaution 46

Part 2 The Perils of Prediction

3 Complexity and Catastrophe 71

4 Interests and Emergence 99

Part 3 The Environment of the Other

5 Other States 123

6 Other Generations 150

7 Other Forms of Life 176

Part 4 Our Environmental Future

8 Ecological Rationality 203

9 Environmental Constitutionalism 229

Appendix: The Environmental Possibilities Act 255

Notes 259

Index 309

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