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11 - Behavioral Perceptions and Policies Toward the Environment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2010

Rajeev Gowda
Affiliation:
Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore
Jeffrey C. Fox
Affiliation:
Catawba College, North Carolina
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Summary

There is a strong relationship between the ways people think about the behavior of nature – the probabilities, rewards, and penalties it metes out – and how we as a society confront environmental problems. Many characteristics of environmental problems stimulate the side of people's perceptions and responses that a band of psychologists and economists have recently worked together to describe. Environmental concerns frequently involve small and ill-defined probabilities, at times incorporating scenarios that are hard to envision. Many decisions of the potentially gravest import, such as destruction of the ozone layer or alteration of the global climate, are unique situations; they have no precedents and offer no repeat plays. Experts often disagree significantly about environmental problems and about the models to employ in thinking about them. The measuring rod of money, so helpful in dealing with many policy concerns, is absent or at best one step removed in measuring environmental outputs. Such outputs are not traded on markets, and people have difficulty making trade-offs between them and other valuable commodities. These conditions challenge wise choice. In this hostile soil for rationality, behavioral decision can flourish. In an unkindly moment, we may liken behavioral decision to an alien plant. To the rationalist, it is a weed in the garden where only rationality should bloom. To the realist, it is better to understand this plant's anatomy, learning how to live with it, even harvesting it at times, since eradication seems unlikely. Realists recognize that certain conditions make behavioral decision virtually inevitable. Environmental policy offers such conditions.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2001

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