In my experience in the United States, Mexico, Brazil, and reading regarding 
other countries, the key is more often enforcement effort rather than the 
letter of the law. An aggressive government and/or prosecutors can do a great 
deal with relatively loose laws, and, on the other hand, can use very tough 
looking legislation as nothing more than a smoke screen that enables poor 
performance. Of course, it goes without saying that it is best to have an 
aggressive government enforcement effort and stringent law, although some of my 
friends and ex-students in California state government complain mightily that 
sometimes stringent laws, by too great caution and specificity, can actually 
stand in the way of effective enforcement, and, especially, of remediation.

These observations may be platitudinous to all of you, but such points often 
seem to get lost in the legal and political science literature, as well as in 
journalistic treatments.

Angus

Angus Wright
Professor Emeritus of Environmental Studies
California State University, Sacramento
________________________________________
From: [email protected] [[email protected]] On Behalf Of Raul 
Pacheco-Vega [[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, August 10, 2010 9:06 PM
To: [email protected] >> "[email protected]"
Subject: Re: [gep-ed] data question

Dear Asseem, Kevin and colleagues,

I have previously criticized measurements of stringency of environmental
laws, and to this day, I do not think we have one that is rigorous
enough. How would we define stringency of environmental law? Number of
inspections of industrial plants per year? Re-incidence of inspection?
Amount of money paid per infraction (fine)?

When I wrote my doctoral dissertation I used a combined measure of
number of plant inspections and fines to assess Mexican environmental
regulatory pressure, but I acknowledged it was a very rough measure. I
agree with Kevin that EPI could be used, but I think we still are far
away from a solid measurement of regulatory stringency.

Yours,
Raul

Kevin Gallagher wrote:
> A. Prakash
>
> I think the best you can do with that and a grain of salt is Esty's
> "Environmental Performance Index" at Yale:
>
> http://epi.yale.edu/
>
> Best
>
> Kevin Gallagher
>
> wrote:
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I am looking for cross-national data on stringency of environmental
>> laws and levels of carbon taxation. Any suggestions where I might
>> find such data?
>>
>> Many thanks,
>>
>> ********************************************
>> Aseem Prakash
>> Professor
>> Department of Political Science
>> 39 Gowen Hall, Box 353530
>> University of Washington
>> Seattle, WA 98195-3530
>>
>> 206-543-2399
>> 206-685-2146 (fax)
>> [email protected]
>> http://faculty.washington.edu/aseem/
>
>

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