Taming Regulation Superfund and the Challenge of Regulatory Reform | Edition: 1
Author: Robert T. Nakamura, Thomas W. Church
ISBN: 9780815759430
publisher: Brookings Institution Press
publisher Date: 11/28/2003
Price: 20.95
eBookPrice: 0
Schools: University at Albany (SUNY)
Description: Despite three decades of vigorous efforts at deregulation across the
government, regulation remains ubiquitous. It also continues to be
unpopular because it forces individuals and businesses to do
things—frequently costly and unpleasant things—that they don’t
want to do. If regulatory programs are to survive and remain effective,
the challenge posed by their endemic unpopularity and political
vulnerability must be met.
Unlike much of the existing literature on regulation, Taming Regulation
begins with the assumption that the government’s capacity to utilize
regulation as a policy tool is vital. The book examines the questions of
how to make the inherently coercive aspects of regulation more
politically acceptable in the present antiregulatory environment and how
the legal and administrative challenges of reform in ongoing regulatory
programs might best be approached.
The authors explore these issues through a case study of administrative
reform in the Superfund program. Chartered with an ambitious mission to
clean up the nation’s hazardous waste sites, Superfund was from its
inception a uniquely aggressive and unpopular program. Yet despite the
election in 1994 of a Republican Congress committed to fundamental
changes in environmental regulation, the Superfund program weathered the
storm and remains intact today. The authors credit this political and
programmatic success to a series of artfully designed and orchestrated
internal reforms that softened Superfund’s implementation, thus
increasing its political support while retaining its potent coercive
tools.
Taming Regulation provides a cautionary discussion of both the
necessity and the difficulty of regulatory reform. It is essential
reading for students of regulation and environmental policy, for
practitioners contemplating reform of ongoing regulatory programs, and
for those interested in the checkered history of Superfund.
About the Author:
Thomas W. Church is a professor of Political Science and Public Policy
at the Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy of the State
University of New York at Albany. He has published published extensively
on environmental policy, court reform, and the nexus of law and policy.
Robert T. Nakamura is a professor of Political Science and Public
Policy at the Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy of the
State University of New York at Albany. His research has focused on
environmental policy and policy implementation. Along with Thomas W.
Church, he is the coauthor of the first comprehensive study of the
operation of the Superfund program, Cleaning Up the Mess(Brookings,
1993).