From: KHAN Ali -CRP FINANCE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Book on Environmental Management in Developing Countries
Date: Wed, 17 Nov 1999 11:52:47 -0500


GROWING PAINS:
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Edited by Walter Wehrmeyer and Yacob Mulugetta Centre for
Environmental Strategy, University of Surrey, UK

368pp 234 x 156 mm
Hardback: ISBN 1 874719 13 6
=A335.00/US$65.00
Paperback: ISBN 1 874719 23 3=20
=A319.95/US$40.00

Environmental management is a global phenomenon, embracing all
businesses in all countries, whether or not there already exists
an organised response to managing environmental impacts.

Today, there are gross inequalities between the world's richest
and poorest nations in terms of income distribution, consumption
patterns, access to resources and environmental impact. Yet both
the developed North and the developing South are committed, at
least in words, to achieving sustainable development.

Public awareness of environmental issues in the North has been
rising in recent years and further degradation is now largely
minimised through more stringent regulatory regimes, voluntary
agreements and growing consumer and stakeholder pressure on
corporations. Still, the North is continuing to lead an
environmentally unsustainable lifestyle as environmental
improvements are nullified by overall increases in consumption
levels.

In the South, a billion people still do not have access to the
most basic needs. Poor countries need to accelerate their
consumption growth if they are to ensure that the lives of their
people are enriched. However, with rapid economic growth and
corresponding increases in consumption now under way, their
environmental impact is soon to become substantially greater. In
a world that strives towards stemming global crises such as
climate change, the path already taken by the rich and
high-growth economies over the past century cannot be repeated by
the South if the desired objective is to create a future that is
truly sustainable.

'Growing Pains' examines environmental management in the South
from a number of perspectives. It is designed to stimulate the
discussion about the role that corporations and national and
international organisations play in sustainable  development. It
does not offer panaceas, as each country has its own problems and
opportunities; and, after almost 50 years of failed
panacea-oriented economic development policy transfer from the
North to the South, it is time to abandon hope for universal
solutions and instead look to individual approaches that work.

The book is divided into five themes: globalisation; the role of
business; a focus on national strategies; trade and the
environment; and the organisational and structural challenges of
sustainable development.

With contributions from an outstanding collection of authors in
both the developed and developing worlds including UNIDO; the
Thailand Environment Institute, Arthur D. Little, Inc., Shell
Peru; IUCN, the Russian Academy of Sciences and IIED, this
important and unique new book presents a body of work that will
provide essential reading for businesses working in developing
countries, environmental and developmental NGOs and researchers
engaged in the debate and sharing of best practice in this
increasingly critical subject area.

"Growing Pains is a monitor of how well we are doing in
protecting environmental goods in developing countries. Key
actors=D1theoreticians (development economists in particular),
government ministers and policy planners, chief executive
officers in the private sector and their advisers, and heads of
institutions (national and multilateral)=D1will surely identify
with specific issues explored in this book."

Carlos Magarinos, Director-General, United Nations Industrial
Development Organisation

Table of Contents

Foreword: Carlos Magarinos, Director-General, United Nations
Industrial Development Organisation

Introduction: Walter Wehrmeyer and Yacob Mulugetta, University of
Surrey, UK

Section 1: Globalisation
1. The Environmental Challenge of Going Global
Gilbert S. Hedstrom, Ronald A.N. McLean and Bernhard H. Metzger,
Arthur
D. Little, Inc., USA
2. An Essay on Biodiversity and Globalisation
Frank Vorhies, IUCN: The World Conservation Organisation,
Switzerland
3. Joint Implementation of Climate Change? Distortions in
Practice and
Effects on Developing Countries
Neil E. Harrison, University of Wyoming, USA
4. Financial Globalisation and Sustainable Development in Mexico
David Barkin, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico

Section 2: Focus on Business
5. The Effect of Environmental Regulations on Industrial
Competitiveness of Selected Industries in Developing Countries
Ralph (Skip) Luken, United Nations Industrial Development
Organisation, Austria
6. Multinational Corporations' Environmental Performance in
Developing Countries: The Aluminum Company of America
Dennis A. Rondinelli, University of North Carolina, USA, and
Gyula
Vastag, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
7. ISO 14001: The Severe Challenge for China. An Overview on the
Problems China Faced in the Implementation and Certification of
ISO 14001
Di Chang-Xing (Mike), ERM Certification and Verification Service,
China
8. Environmental Management, Crime and Information: A Russian
Case Study
Alexey A. Voinov, University of Maryland, USA, Irina P.
Glazyrina, GEF
Project, Russia, and Bruno Pavoni and Nadezhda A. Zharova,
University of Venice, Italy

Section 3: National Focus
9. Driving Forces and Barriers to the Implementation of Sound
Environmental Management in the Andean Region of Latin America
Percy Garcia, Julia Gonzalez and Dixon Thompson, University of
Calgary, Canada
10. Environmental Management in Uncertain Economies
Alexey A. Voinov, University of Maryland, USA, Irina P.
Glazyrina, GEF
Project, Russia, and Bruno Pavoni and Nadezhda A. Zharova,
University of Venice, Italy
11. Just Green Marketing? State, Business and Environmental
Management in Egypt
Jeannie Sowers, Princeton University, USA
12. Environmental Management in Thailand: Achievements, Barriers
and Future Trends
Mandar Parasnis, Thailand Environment Institute
13. The Colombian Road to Environmental Management
Emilio Latorre, Universidad del Valle, Colombia

Section 4: Trade and the Environment
14. Trade Liberalisation and the Developing World: The
Environmental
Impact of the Uruguay Round
Matthew A. Cole, University of Birmingham, UK
15. Reaping the Benefits: Trade Opportunities for
Developing-Country
Producers from Sustainable Consumption and Production
Nick Robins and Sarah Roberts, International Institute for
Environment
and Development, UK
16. Multinational Corporations' Impacts on the Environment and
Communities in the Developing World: A Synthesis of the
Contemporary
Debate
Titus Moser and Damian Miller, Cambridge University, UK
17. Logging versus Recycling: Problems in the Industrial Ecology
of =
Pulp
Manufacturing in South-East Asia
David A. Sonnenfeld, Washington State University, USA

Section 5: Environmental Management and Sustainable Development
18. Environmental Management and Organisational Change: The
Impact of
the World Bank
Ans Kolk, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
19. Sustainable Development and the Environment: Lessons from the
Development Experience of Kerala State in India
Govindan Parayil, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
20. Searching for Sustainability in the Marshall Islands:
Development
Dreams Clash with Ecological Reality
Barbara A. Ribbens and Eric Ribbens, University of Connecticut,
USA
21. The Role of Stakeholder Participation: Linkages to
Stakeholder
Impact Assessment and Social Capital in Camisea, Peru
Murray Jones, Shell Prospecting & Development, Peru
22. Indonesia in the 21st Century: Environment at the Crossroads
Peter Koffel, Murdoch University, Australia
23. Competing Discourses of Environmental and Water Management in
Post-Apartheid South Africa
Patrick Bond, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa, and
Robyn
Stein, Attorney in environmental and water law, South Africa

To order this title online, please go to:
http://www.greenleaf-publishing.com/catalogue/growpns.htm

Alternatively, please contact:

Samantha Self
Greenleaf Publishing
Aizlewood Business Centre,
Aizlewood's Mill,
Sheffield S3 8GG
UK
Tel: +44 (0)114 282 3475
Fax: +44 (0)114 282 3476
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.greenleaf-publishing.com



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