Dear Colleagues,

Forgive the shameless self-promotion, but I am pleased to announce the
publication of my new book entitled, "Foreign Firms, Investment, and
Environmental Regulation in the People's Republic of China", by Stanford
University Press .

For anyone interested, below is a brief description and here is a link to
the publisher's website: http://www.sup.org/book.cgi?id=18106

-- 
Phillip Stalley
Assistant Professor, Political Science
DePaul University

--

 *Title:  *Foreign Firms, Investment, and Environmental Regulation in the
People's Republic of China



*Review:*

"Philip Stalley effectively demonstrates that the environmental impact of
foreign investment in China is not simply a race to the bottom but that many
foreign firms have actually helped to raise standards. This book is a must
for all interested in understanding the impact of foreign investment upon
China's environment."—Richard Louis Edmonds, Visiting Professor in
Geographical Studies, The University of Chicago



*Product Description:*

This new book takes as its focus a simple yet critical question: Does
foreign direct investment lead to weakened environmental regulation, thereby
turning developing countries into "pollution havens"? The debate over this
question has never before been the focus of a book about China. Phillip
Stalley examines the development of Chinese law governing the environmental
impact of foreign investors, describes how regional competition for
investment has influenced environmental regulation, and analyzes the
environmental practices of foreign and Chinese companies. He finds only
modest evidence that integration with the global economy has transformed
China into a pollution haven. Indeed, after China opened its domestic
market, the entry of foreign films largely strengthened the environmental
protection regime, including the oversight of foreign firms' environmental
practices. Nevertheless, foreign firms (and the competition to lure them)
have posed new challenges to controlling industrial pollution. Stalley
identifies the conditions under which foreign investment contributes to and
undermines environmental protection, offering readers a solid understanding
of China's environmental challenges. He also builds on existing theory and
provides hypotheses that can be tested with other developing nations.


 *Contents*:
1. To go green is glorious? : China, foreign investment, and environmental
regulation

2. The politics of industrial pollution in China : laws, institutions, and
challenges

3. Greening foreign investment : China's legal framework

4. Patterns in implementation : strengthening enforcement

5. Patterns in compliance : multinationals as agents of upward pressure

6. Beyond multinationals : the environmental behavior of foreign firms in
China.

7. Conclusion

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