LEADER 00000cam  2200901Ki 4500 
001    ocn891590938 
003    OCoLC 
005    20190607042147.4 
006    m     o  d         
007    cr cnu---unuuu 
008    140929s2014    onca    ob    001 0 eng d 
020    9781442616783|q(electronic bk.) 
020    1442616784|q(electronic bk.) 
020    |z9781442648357 
020    |z144264835X 
020    |z9781442626133 
020    |z1442626135 
035    (OCoLC)891590938|z(OCoLC)893230434 
040    N$T|beng|erda|epn|cN$T|dJSTOR|dYDXCP|dRRP|dCELBN|dOCLCO
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       |dS4S|dOCLCQ|dSTF|dCEF|dIGB|dINT|dAUW|dBTN|dMHW|dINTCL
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       |dM8D|dUKAHL 
049    MAIN 
050  4 HD30.255|b.A58 2014eb 
082 04 658.4/083|223 
100 1  Antweiler, Werner, 
245 10 Elements of environmental management /|cWerner Antweiler. 
264  1 Toronto ;|aBuffalo :|bUniversity of Toronto Press,|c[2014]
300    1 online resource (xvi, 400 pages) :|billustrations 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    computer|bc|2rdamedia 
338    online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 
505 0  1.1. What is environmental management? -- 1.2. The systems
       approach -- 1.3. What is sustainability? -- 1.3.1. 
       Intergenerational trade-offs -- 1.3.2. Exhaustible 
       resources? -- 1.3.3. Ecological footprint -- 1.3.4. Macro 
       measure: Adjusted net savings -- 1.3.5. Micro measure: 
       Entropy -- 1.4. Which companies should care the most? -- 
       1.5. Corporate social responsibility -- 1.5.1. 
       Characteristics of CSR -- 1.5.2. Do stakeholders recognize
       CSR? -- 1.5.3. The economics of CSR -- 1.5.4. CSR strategy
       -- 1.6. Summary -- 1.7. Study questions and exercises -- 
       2.1. Energy -- 2.2. Fresh water -- 2.3. Air pollution -- 
       2.4. Waste management -- 2.5. Transportation -- 2.6. Noise
       -- 2.7. Climate change -- 2.8. Summary -- 2.9. Study 
       questions and exercises -- 3.1. Basic economic concept -- 
       3.1.1. Pollutants and externalities -- 3.1.2. Public goods
       and property rights -- 3.1.3. Efficiency and fairness -- 
       3.2. Policy instruments -- 3.2.1. Instrument choice 
       criteria. 
505 8  3.2.2. Technology and emission standards -- 3.2.3. 
       Environmental taxes -- 3.2.4. Tradeable emission permits -
       - 3.2.5. Hybrid regimes -- 3.2.6. Subsidies -- 3.2.7. 
       Second-best approaches -- 3.2.8. Static and dynamic 
       efficiency -- 3.2.9. Dealing with uncertainty -- 3.3. 
       Environmental markets in action -- 3.4. Valuing the 
       environment -- 3.4.1. Revealed-preference approaches -- 
       3.4.2. Stated-preference approaches -- 3.5. Cost-benefit 
       analysis -- 3.6. International trade repercussions -- 3.7.
       Summary -- 3.8. Study questions -- 4.1. Concepts -- 4.2. 
       Goal definition and scoping -- 4.3. Inventory analysis -- 
       4.4. Impact analysis -- 4.5. Improvement analysis -- 4.6. 
       Environmental input-output analysis -- 4.7. Summary -- 
       4.8. Study questions and exercises -- 5.1. Pollution as a 
       legal concept -- 5.2. Environmental law in Canada -- 
       5.2.1. Federal jurisdiction -- 5.2.2. Provincial 
       jurisdiction -- 5.2.3. Municipal jurisdiction -- 5.2.4. 
       Interjurisdictional cooperation -- 5.2.5. Aboriginal 
       rights. 
505 8  5.3. Environmental law in the United States -- 5.3.1. The 
       Clean Air Act -- 5.3.2. The Clean Water Act -- 5.3.3. 
       Hazardous pollutants and the superfund -- 5.4. Civil 
       liability for environmental harm -- 5.5. Corporate and 
       personal duties -- 5.5.1. The Canadian legal context -- 
       5.5.2. The US legal context -- 5.6. Damage, compensation, 
       and remediation -- 5.7. International environmental 
       treaties -- 5.7.1. International law -- 5.7.2. The GATT, 
       the WTO, and NAFTA -- 5.7.3. Environmental border 
       adjustments -- 5.8. Summary -- 5.9. Study questions and 
       exercises -- 6.1. Objectives and process overview -- 
       6.1.1. The EIA process in the United States -- 6.1.2. The 
       EIA process in Canada -- 6.2. Screening -- 6.3. Scoping --
       6.4. Impact prediction -- 6.4.1. Fixed-point scoring -- 
       6.4.2. The analytic hierarchy process -- 6.5. Impact 
       management -- 6.5.1. Avoidance and mitigation -- 6.5.2. 
       Remediation techniques -- 6.6. Summary -- 6.7. Study 
       questions and exercises -- 7.1. EMS components. 
505 8  7.2. Code of conduct -- 7.3. Environmental management plan
       -- 7.3.1. Pollution prevention (P2) plan -- 7.3.2. 
       Environmental emergency (E2) plan -- 7.4. Environmental 
       audit -- 7.5. ISO 14000 -- 7.5.1. The certification 
       process -- 7.5.2. The adoption decision -- 7.5.3. 
       Effectiveness -- 7.6. Summary -- 7.7. Study questions -- 
       8.1. Strategy space -- 8.2. Green innovation and 
       technology -- 8.2.1. Process innovation -- 8.2.2. Product 
       innovation and differentiation -- 8.2.3. Servicizing -- 
       8.3. Green sourcing -- 8.4. Green marketing -- 8.4.1. 
       Green branding -- 8.4.2. Eco-labelling -- 8.4.3. The 
       greenwashing trap -- 8.4.4. Green price premium -- 8.4.5. 
       The credibility gap -- 8.5. Stakeholders and the role of 
       ENGOs -- 8.6. Overcoming nimbyism -- 8.7. Managing 
       adversity -- 8.7.1. Environmental risk management -- 
       8.7.2. Crisis management -- 8.8. Summary -- 8.9. Study 
       questions and exercises -- 9.1. Air pollution -- 9.1.1. 
       Dispersion -- 9.1.2. Control strategies. 
505 8  9.1.3. Abit6thent devices: Particulates -- 9.1.4. 
       Abatement devices: Gases -- 9.1.5. Specific pollutants -- 
       9.2. Water pollution -- 9.2.1. Types and sources -- 9.2.2.
       Wastewater treatment -- 9.3. Solid waste management -- 
       9.3.1. Solid waste streams -- 9.3.2. Landfills -- 9.3.3. 
       Incineration -- 9.3.4. Hazardous waste -- 9.4. Summary -- 
       9.5. Study questions and exercises -- 10.1. Energy supply,
       energy demand, and Hubbert's peak -- 10.2. Coal, oil and 
       gas -- 10.3. Nuclear power -- 10.4. Levellized energy cost
       -- 10.5. Renewable energy -- 10.6. Smart power grids and 
       super grids -- 10.7. Energy conservation and energy 
       efficiency -- 10.7.1. Technology -- 10.7.2. Conservation 
       measures -- 10.8. Summary -- 10.9.study questions and 
       exercises -- 11.1. Mining -- 11.1.1. Economics of 
       exhaustible resources -- 11.1.2. Backstop technologies -- 
       11.1.3. Recycling -- 11.1.4. Environmental challenges -- 
       11.2. Forestry -- 11.2.1. Optimal forest rotation -- 
       11.2.2. Management practices. 
505 8  11.2.3. Pulp and paper mills -- 11.3. Fisheries -- 11.3.1.
       Fisheries economics -- 11.3.2. Fisheries management and 
       public policy -- 11.4. Summary -- 11.5. Study questions 
       and exercises -- 12.1. The time horizon -- 12.2. 
       Population growth -- 12.3. Survival challenges -- 12.4. 
       Long-term power sources -- 12.5. Long-term mineral 
       resources -- 12.6. The sustainability agenda -- 12.7. 
       Study questions. 
506 1  Unlimited number of concurrent users.|5UkHlHU 
650  0 Industrial management|xEnvironmental aspects. 
650  0 Strategic planning|xEnvironmental aspects. 
650  0 Business enterprises|xEnvironmental aspects. 
650  0 Environmental protection|xEconomic aspects. 
856 40 |uhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/10.3138/j.ctt7zwbx7 
921    . 
936    JSTOR-D-2018/19