The Rule of Law and the Pattern of Environment Protection

We develop and test a theory of the rule of law and environmental policy formation. In our model an increase in the degree of rule of law has two opposing partial effects on environmental policy: first, a greater share of policy decisions are implemented according to law; second, industry bribery efforts increase because more is at stake. Moreover, we find that an increase in corruptibility of policymakers lowers the stringency of environmental policy. The empirical findings suggest that a greater degree of rule of law raises environmental policy stringency, but the effect is lower where corruptibility is high.
Publication date: March 2002
ISBN: 9781451846850
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Environmental Conservation and Protection , Environmental , Property Rights , Rule of Law , and Environmental Policy , law , environmental policy , environmental tax , environmental stringency , Renewable Resources and Conservation: Government Policy , Models of Political Processes: Rent-seeking , Elections , Legislatures , and Voting

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