International Organizations and Environmental Aid


Book Description

The focus of this dissertation is the strategic relationship between donors and recipients of environmental aid. There is no agreement among researchers on the question of whether or not institutions that provide aid to address the problem of global environmental commons can achieve noticeable improvements in the quality of the natural environment. In my dissertation I analyze the conditions that can make such aid effective in achieving its environmental goals. My study demonstrates that financial transfer institutions can be successful in improving environment, but this positive impact is indirect, through the effects of donor-recipient interactions that alter incentives of governments, rather than direct, through inflows of aid. Therefore, the main dependent variable of this study is the effectiveness of environmental aid.




U.S. International Environmental Policy


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Greening Aid?


Book Description

For more than three decades, the impact of aid on the global environment has been the subject of vigorous protest and debate. With billions spent on environmental aid each year, this groundbreaking text seeks to understand why aid is given, how effective it is, and whether aid is actually going to the places with the greatest environmental need.




International Organizations in Global Environmental Governance


Book Description

Provides a comparative study of the role of international organizations in environmental governance and features case studies on the World Bank; OECD; the UN Environment Programme and secretariats to environmental treaties; and hybrid organizations.







Institutions for Environmental Aid


Book Description

The discrepancy between levels of environmental quality of rich and poor countries will continue as long as large per capita gaps in income persist. Institutions for Environmental Aid draws on research from economics, international relations, and development assistance, as well as the growing literature on international environmental relations, to evaluate the effectiveness of international institutions designed to facilitate the transfer of resources from richer to poorer countries, in conjunction with efforts to improve the natural environment. Looking at the Global Environmental Facility, aid arrangements associated with the Montreal Protocol on the ozone layer, environmental operations of world financial institutions (with respect to aid to Eastern Europe and efforts to save tropical forests), debt-for-nature swaps, and the Rhine River, Institutions for Environmental Aid asks whether they increase concern, improve the contractual environment, and increase national capacity--functions identified in a companion study, Institutions for the Earth. The authors of this carefully planned collaboration observe that although there is some evidence of effectiveness in these terms, conflicts of interests within and between states, and involving nongovernmental and intergovernmental organizations, are frequently debilitating; successful initiatives result from a combination of favorable constellations of interests and creative, dedicated leadership. Global Environmental Accords series







Institutions for Environmental Aid


Book Description

The discrepancy between levels of environmental quality of rich and poor countries will continue as long as large per capita gaps in income persist. 'Institutions for Environmental Aid' draws on research from economics, international relations, and development assistance, as well as the growing literature on international environmental relations, to evaluate the effectiveness of international institutions designed to facilitate the transfer of resources from richer to poorer countries, in conjunction with efforts to improve the natural environment.




Review of the Global Environment 10 Years After Stockholm


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International Environment


Book Description