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GOVT-354 Environmental Politics
Professor Butler
This course will examine recurring political problems arising in the context of environmental and natural resource protection. Subject areas will include the philosophic and economic underpinnings of the environmental movement, wildlife protection, wetlands preservation, air and water quality improvement, hazardous waste disposal, timber management, and wilderness and park protection. The types of problems examined will include issues of federalism, the proper role for cost (risk) benefit analysis, economic incentives as a management approach, environmental racism, regulatory "taking" of private property without compensation, appropriate roles for the three branches of government in environmental decision-making, international (including trade) environmental issues, and the relative merits of different methods of resolving environmental disputes.
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Look for this course in the schedule of classes.

The academic department web site for this program may provide other details about this course.

Georgetown University37th and O Streets, N.W., Washington D.C. 20057(202) 687.0100

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