+ All Categories
Home > Documents > here - Social Sciences - UC San Diego

here - Social Sciences - UC San Diego

Date post: 11-Feb-2022
Category:
Upload: others
View: 3 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
82
AERE 2002 EAERE Julie Armstrong 2ND WORLD CONGRESS OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMISTS Monterey, CA USA June 24-27, 2002 PROGRAM
Transcript

A E R E2 0 0 2E A E R E

Julie Armstrong

2ND WORLD CONGRESS OFENVIRONMENTAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMISTS

Monterey, CA USA

June 24-27, 2002

P R O G R A M

2ND WORLD CONGRESS OFENVIRONMENTAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMISTS

Monterey, CA USAJune 24-27, 2002

P R O G R A M

E A E R EA E R E

E A E R E2 0 0 2

The photograph on the cover of the Program Book shows the Big Sur coastline.

The photograph on the cover of the Book of Abstracts shows the Carmel Mission.

The tree shown on the title page is an artist’s rendition of the Lone Cypress,

viewed from the 17 Mile Drive in Pebble Beach.

CONTENTS Welcome to the 2nd World Congress …………………………… 2 Welcome to Monterey …………………………………………… 3 Congress Sponsors .……………………………………………… 4 Acknowledgments ………………………………………………. 5 Congress Committees …………………………………………… 6 Map of Monterey Area …………………………………………. 10 Congress Information Location …………………………………………………. 11 Public Parking …………………………………………… 11 Registration ……………………………………………… 11 Congress Secretariat …………………………………….. 12 Information Desk ……………………………………….. 12 Message Board …………………………………………. 12 Identification Badges …………………………………… 12 Location of Sessions ……………………………………. 12 Exhibits …………………………………………………. 12 Map with Location of Meeting Rooms ………………… 13 Coffee Breaks …………………………………………. 14 Lunch ………………………………………………….. 14 Internet Access ………………………………………… 14 Photocopying ………………………………………….. 14 Banks/Post Office ……………………………………… 14 Social Activities Gala Dinner ……………………………………………. 15 Eating and Drinking …………………………………… 16 Local Activities ………………………………………… 16 Side Trips and Other Travel …………………………… 16 Congress Program Schedule of Activities …………………………………. 19 Summary of Program Sessions ………………………... 21 List of Papers by Session …………………………….… 25 Index of Participants ………………………………………….. 61 Advertisements………………………………………………... 80 Cambridge University Press Earthscan Edward Elgar Resources for the Future

WELCOME TO THE 2nd WORLD CONGRESS!

As Presidents of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (AERE) and the European Association of Environmental Economists (EAERE), it gives us great pleasure to welcome you to the 2nd World Congress of Environmental and Resource Economists being held in Monterey CA, USA, June 24-27, 2002. The 1st World Congress, organized by EAERE, was held in Venice in June, 1998. Now AERE is organizing the Congress, and it is being held in North America. The 1st World Congress lasted for three days and had 105 paper and panel sessions; the 2nd World Congress will last for four days and has 150 paper and panel sessions. The increase reflects both the growth in the membership of our two associations over the past four years and also our desire to make this Congress more truly a worldwide event. We are delighted that participants from more than 40 countries will be attending this Congress, including representatives of regional networks of environmental and resource economists from Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East and Central Asia. We hope that the personal ties and intellectual associations developed in Monterey will last long into the future, and will become a permanent legacy of this World Congress. We thank the members of the Organizing and Program Committees and their Chairs, Michael Hanemann and Richard Carson, for their tremendous effort to ensure the success of this Congress. Charles Kolstad President, AERE Klaus Conrad President, EAERE

- 2 -

WELCOME TO MONTEREY! I am pleased that the Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics at UC Berkeley was selected to host the 2nd World Congress of Environmental and Resource Economists, and I am delighted to welcome you to Monterey. I hope that this Congress will be a memorable experience for everyone who participates. Richard Carson and his colleagues have assembled an outstanding program of invited paper sessions, contributed paper sessions, and panels. I hope you will also find time to enjoy some of the many sights of the Monterey Peninsula.

In December 1602, a Spanish expedition landed in Monterey Bay, but left after a few weeks. In May 1770, the Spanish returned to Monterey under the leadership of Gaspa de Portola. The next month, a mission was founded near what is now Carmel, named in honor of San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo, an Italian cardinal of the Medici family, and a town square was laid out in what is now downtown Monterey. Monterey was the capital of Alta California under Spanish and then Mexican rule, and it served as the first capital of California as a US territory. The Presidio of Monterey and the Monterey State Historic Park are immediately adjacent to where the Congress is being held. The Monterey area also has many natural attractions. The Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary is the largest marine sanctuary in the United States. In Pacific Grove, at the northwestern edge of the Monterey Peninsula, there is a famous Monarch Butterfly Sanctuary. Along the Bay to the north are the Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Reserve, and the Salinas River National Wildlife Refuge. A few miles south of Carmel is the dramatic Big Sur coastline, with many beautiful state parks and beaches. The Seventeen Mile Drive in Pebble Beach, running from Pacific Grove to Carmel, affords spectacular views of the coastline, forests and golf courses. The drive passes by a Monterey cypress grove. The Monterey cypress grows wild in indigenous groves only along this stretch of roadway and at Point Lobos. One of the oldest and most photogenic of these trees is the Lone Cypress, which is featured in our logo for the Congress. Some of my own personal favorite places to visit are the Carmel Mission, Point Lobos State Park, Big Sur, the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas, and the wineries of the Salinas Valley. But whatever your tastes, I am confident you will find much to enjoy if you can tear yourself away from the organized sessions of the Congress! Michael Hanemann Chair, Organizing Committee

- 3 -

CONGRESS SPONSORS

The 2nd World Congress of Environmental and Resource Economists is sponsored by the Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economics at the University of California (UC) Berkeley, Davis and Riverside and the Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics at UC Berkeley, together with the Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and Management at UC Santa Barbara, the Economics Department at UC San Diego and the University of California’s Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation. We gratefully acknowledge their financial support for this Congress. The Hewlett Foundation and the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) provided support for sessions at the Congress, which is very gratefully acknowledged. The governments of Sweden and Ireland, the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the Giannini Foundation, and the Hewlett Foundation provided funds, which made it possible to provide travel grants to more than 60 Congress participants from the developing countries and emerging economies.

- 4 -

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS For their invaluable assistance in organizing the Congress and its program, we are deeply grateful to Teresa Brown, Courtney Barrett, Michael Chui, Dana Longhurst, Diana Lazo, Barbara Halperin, Chris Busch, and Marilyn Voigt. We are deeply grateful to Maximilian Auffhammer for his outstanding service as the Congress Program Coordinator. We thank Julia Carson for arranging the side events and baby-sitting for the Congress. We thank our distinguished keynote speakers for honoring us with their presence. We thank Jordan Louviere and Ken Train for generously agreeing to conduct tutorial sessions. We thank Vic Adamowicz, Scott Barrett, Antonio Bento, David Brookshire, Matthew Clark, Frank Convery, Ariel Dinar, John Dixon, Wayne Gray, Zulma Guzman, Geoffrey Heal, Sandy Hoffman, Bill Jaeger, Charlie Kolstad, Raymond Kopp, John List, Jordan Louviere, Katrin Millock, Richard Norgaard, Linwood Pendleton, Stef Proost, Shanti Rabindran, Kenneth Richards, Art Small, Michael Toman, Jeff Vincent and Steve Vosti for their work in organizing invited paper and panel sessions. We thank V. Kerry Smith for organizing the four Tuesday afternoon sessions on RFF’s seminal contributions to Environmental Economics over 50 years. We thank all the participants in the paper sessions and panels for their contribution to the Congress program.

Michael Hanemann Chair, Organizing Committee

Richard Carson Chair, Program Committee

- 5 -

CONGRESS COMMITTEES ORGANIZING COMMITTEE Michael Hanemann University of California, Berkeley (Chair) Richard Carson University of California, San Diego Maria Cunha-e-Sa Universidade Nova de Lisboa Charles Kolstad University of California, Santa Barbara Thomas Sterner University of Gothenburg Alistair Ulph University of Southampton COMMITTEE TO PROMOTE DEVELOPING COUNTRY PARTICIPATION Thomas Sterner University of Gothenburg (Chair) Jeffrey Vincent University of California, San Diego (Vice Chair) Richard Carson University of California, San Diego Frank Convery University College, Dublin John Dixon World Bank Michael Hanemann University of California, Berkeley Karl-Goran Maler Beijer Institute Charles Perrings University of York Kazuhiro Ueta University of Kyoto

- 6 -

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Richard Carson University of California, San Diego (Chair) Thomas Sterner University of Gothenburg (Vice Chair)

Jeffrey Vincent University of California, San Diego (Vice Chair) Maximilian Auffhammer University of California, San Diego (Coordinator)

Vic Adamowicz University of AlbertaRichard Adams Oregon State UniversityMahfuzuddin Ahmed ICLARMAnna Alberini University of MarylandEdward Barbier University of WyomingScott Barrett Johns Hopkins UniversityJohn Beghin Iowa State UniversityAntonio Bento University of California, Santa Barbara Lars Bergman Stockholm School of EconomicsRandall Bluffstone University of RedlandsNancy E. Bockstael University of MarylandPeter Bohm Stockholm University John Boyce University of CalgaryKevin Boyle University of MaineJohn Braden University of IllinoisDan Bromley University of Wisconsin, MadisonDavid Brookshire University of New MexicoGardner Brown University of WashingtonDallas Burtraw Resources for the FutureTrudy Cameron University of California, Los Angeles Carlo Carraro University of Venice and FEEMTim Cason Purdue University David Chapman National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationJoseph Charbonneau U.S. Fish and Wildlife ServiceSue Chilton University of NewcastlePeter Clinch University College DublinMick Common University of StrathclydeJon Conrad Cornell University Frank Convery University College DublinBrian R. Copeland University of British ColumbiaChristopher Costello University of California, Santa Barbara Ronald Cummings Georgia State UniversityAart J. de Zeeuw Tilburg UniversityJ.R. DeShazo University of California, Los Angeles Ariel Dinar World BankJohn A. Dixon World BankPierre duVair California Energy CommissionScott Farrow Carnegie Mellon UniversityLinda Fernandez University of California, RiversideTony Fisher University of California, BerkeleyJerald J. Fletcher West Virginia UniversityNicholas Flores University of ColoradoHenk Folmer Wageningen University

- 7 -

Gérard Gaudet University of MontrealLarry Goulder Stanford UniversityWayne Gray Clark UniversityMichael Greenstone University of ChicagoTheodore Groves University of California, San DiegoTim Haab Ohio State UniversityJane Hall California State University, Fullerton Nick Hanley University of EdinburghRögnvaldur Hannesson Institute of Fisheries EconomicsWinston Harrington Resources for the FutureJohn Hartwick Queen's University, Canada, Geoffrey Heal Columbia University Gloria Helfand University of MichiganJulie Hewitt U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Michael Hoel University of Oslo John K. Horowitz University of MarylandCharles Howe University of Colorado, BoulderHelen Ingram University of California, IrvineCarol Jones U.S. Department of AgricultureSuzi Kerr Motu: Economic and Public Policy Research TrustCatherine Kling Iowa State UniversityKeith Knapp University of California, RiversideRaymond Kopp Resources for the FutureRandy Kramer Duke UniversityJeffrey A. Krautkraemer Washington State UniversityBengt Kriström Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Kerry Krutilla Indiana UniversityKouichi Kuriyama Waseda UniversityJeffrey T. La France University of California, BerkeleyMark Levine Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Tracy Lewis University of FloridaJohn List University of Maryland, College Park Karl-Gustaf Lofgren University of UmeaJohn B. Loomis Colorado State UniversityRaymond Lopez University of MarylandKarl-Goran Maler Beijer InstituteAnil Markandya University of BathCarol McAusland University of California, Santa Barbara Kenneth McConnell University of MarylandNorman Meade National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationRobert Mendelsohn Yale UniversityKatrin Millock CIRED, FranceSusanne Mourato Imperial College, LondonAlistair Munro University of East AngliaStale Navrud Agricultural University of NorwayPeter Nijkamp Free University Amsterdam Richard B. Norgaard University of California, BerkeleyJames Opaluch University of Rhode IslandRaul O'Ryan Universidad de ChilePeter J. Parks Rutgers University

- 8 -

Ian W. H. Parry Resources for the FutureGeorge Parsons University of DelawareDavid Pearce University CollegeCharles Perrings University of YorkRudiger Pethig University of SiegenJack Pezzey Australian National UniversityGreg Poe Cornell UniversityStephen Polasky University of MinnesotaStef Proost Catholic University LeuvenAlan Randall Ohio State UniversityMichael Rauscher Universitat RostockTill Requate University of HeidelbergPere Riera Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona Eirik Romstad Agricultural University of NorwayClifford Russell VanderbiltJayant Sathaye Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Richard Schmalensee MITWilliam Schulze Cornell UniversityKathleen Segerson University of Connecticut Daigee Shaw Academia SinicaMordechai Shechter University of HaifaJason Shogren University of WyomingMargaret Slade University of British ColumbiaKenneth Small University of California, IrvineKerry Smith North Carolina State UniversitySjak Smulders Tilburg UniversityDale Squires National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationDavid Starrett Stanford UniversityRobert Stavins Harvard UniversityJohn Stranlund University of Massachusetts Amherst Timothy Swanson University College LondonOlli Tahvonen Finnish Forest Research InstituteLaura Taylor Georgia State UniversityTom Tietenberg Colby CollegeClem Tisdell University of QueenslandMike Toman Resources for the FutureKenneth Train University of California, BerkeleyYacov Tsur Hebrew University of JerusalemEkko van Ierland Wageningen UniversityNiels Vestergaard University of Southern Denmark John P. Weyant Stanford UniversityDale Whittington University of North CarolinaFrank A. Wolak Stanford UniversityAnastasios Xepapadeas University of CreteZhong Xiang Zhang East-West CenterDavid Zilberman University of California, BerkeleyTomasz Zylicz Warsaw University

- 9 -

CONGRESS INFORMATION LOCATION The World Congress is being held at the Monterey Marriott Hotel and the Monterey Conference Center. The Marriott Hotel is located at 350 Calle Principal, at the intersection of Calle Principal and Del Monte Avenue. The Monterey Conference Center is located at One Portola Plaza, across the street from the Marriott on the other side of Del Monte Avenue. The two buildings are connected by a pedestrian walkway crossing over Del Monte Avenue at the Mezzanine level (the level on which the meeting rooms are located).

PUBLIC PARKING Paid parking is available at the Marriott Hotel. Public parking is also available at two large Municipal Parking Garages on Franklin Street, two blocks down from the Marriott (enter from Del Monte Avenue, Tyler Street, or Franklin Street). REGISTRATION The Registration Desk is located on the Mezzanine Level of the Monterey Marriott Hotel, in the Foyer outside the San Carlos Rooms. The phone number for the Registration Desk is: (831) 647-4031. Opening hours for the Registration desk are as follows: Sunday June 23: 5 pm – 8pm. Monday June 24: 8am – 6 pm. Tuesday June 25: 8am – 6 pm. Wednesday June 26: 8am – 6 pm. Thursday June 27: 8am – 5 pm.

- 11 -

CONGRESS SECRETARIAT The Congress Secretariat is located on the Mezzanine Level of the Monterey Marriott Hotel, in the San Diego Room. The phone number for the Secretariat is: (831) 647-4033. The phone and fax numbers for the Marriott are: (831) 649-4234 phone; (831) 372-2968 fax. INFORMATION DESK The Information Desk, located on the Mezzanine Level of the Marriott Hotel in the Foyer outside the San Carlos Rooms, can provide information on a variety of topics, including lists of Things to Do and See in the Monterey Area; Restaurants and Bars in the Monterey Area; and Banks, Shops etc. MESSAGE BOARD Personal messages and program changes will be displayed on a message board adjacent to the Information Desk on the Mezzanine Level of the Marriott Hotel in the Foyer outside the San Carlos Rooms. IDENTIFICATION BADGES The personal name badge should be worn at all times during the Congress. The name badge is provided at the time of registration. The name badge provides access to the program sessions, as well as coffee breaks, lunches, and the Gala Dinner at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Accompanying persons’ badges enable them to gain access to the Gala Dinner at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Please report the loss of your badge immediately to the Registration desk. LOCATION OF SESSIONS The Keynote Speeches are given every day from 11:45am to 1pm in the Steinbeck Forum of the Monterey Conference Center. The other sessions of the Congress are held on the Mezzanine Level of the Marriott Hotel (the Los Angeles Room, San Carlos I, San Carlos II, San Carlos III and San Carlos IV), and in the Monterey Conference Center (Colton I, Colton II, Colton II, Ferrante I, Ferrante II and Ferrante III). EXHIBITS Several publishers are exhibiting their books on the Mezzanine Level of the Marriott Hotel in the Foyer outside the San Carlos Rooms.

- 12 -

COFFEE BREAKS There is a break for coffee and tea each morning from 10:00 to 10:15am, and a break for soft drinks from 4:15 to 4:30 pm (on June 25, the afternoon break is from 3:45 to 4pm). These refreshments are served both in the Marriott Hotel, in the Foyer outside the San Carlos Rooms, and in the Monterey Conference Center, in the Steinbeck Lobby. LUNCH

Lunch will be provided each day in the form of a choice of box lunches. The box lunches are available to be picked up at 1pm on the Mezzanine Level of the Marriott Hotel in the Foyer outside the San Carlos Rooms. We have reserved the Memory Garden for Congress participants who would like to eat their box lunch there. The Memory Garden, a beautiful walled garden, is located in the Custom House Plaza, a few doors away from the Monterey Conference Center. Other good places to sit and eat your box lunch include on the beach, at Fisherman’s Wharf, and elsewhere in the grounds of the Monterey State Historic Park. INTERNET ACCESS

Computers with internet connections in the Business Center of the Marriott Hotel

are available for a charge. The pay phones in the Marriott Hotel have jacks for connecting a laptop. Internet access is also available near the Marriott at: Bytes, 403 Calle Principal; phone: 831-372-2987; email: [email protected] DJ Cybercafe 256 Figueroa Street; phone: (408) 648-9091;

email [email protected] PHOTOCOPYING Photocopying is available for a charge in the Business Center of the Marriott Hotel. Photocopying is also available near the Marriott at: Copy King, 498 Calle Principal; phone: 831-373-1251; fax: 831-373-1304. BANKS/POST OFFICE Several major banks and a post office are located near the Marriott Hotel. Check with the Information Desk for directions.

- 14 -

SOCIAL ACTIVITIES

GALA DINNER On Monday June 24, there will be a Gala Dinner at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. The Aquarium is located at 886 Cannery Row, at the intersection of Cannery Row and David Avenue. The phone number for the Aquarium is: (831) 648-4800. The Aquarium’s web page is http://www.mbayaq.org/ .

The Aquarium is about 1.5 miles from the Marriott Hotel – a pleasant walk along Pacific, then Lighthouse, and then over to Cannery Row. Paid public parking is available on Wave Street. In addition, shuttle buses will run round-trip from the Marriott Hotel to the Aquarium, and back to the Marriott. The shuttle buses will run approximately every 15 minutes. The Aquarium will open for Dinner at 7:30pm. The first shuttle will leave the Marriott Hotel at 7:15 pm. The last shuttle will leave the Aquarium at 11:30pm.

- 15 -

EATING AND DRINKING There are many good restaurants and bars within a couple of blocks of the Marriott Hotel, including along Calle Principal and Alvarado. The Information Desk can supply an extensive list of places to eat and drink in the Monterey area.

LOCAL ACTIVITIES

The Monterey State Historic Park is immediately adjacent to the Marriott Hotel and the Monterey Conference Center. The Park Headquarters is at 20 Custom House Plaza, a few doors down from the Monterey Conference Center. The phone number is (831) 649-7118

A ninety-minute guided walking tour of the Monterey Historic Park is offered every day at 10 am, 11 am, and 2pm. The tours start at the Custom House Plaza’s Stanton Center Lobby. The City of Monterey operates a free shuttle known as WAVE (Waterfront Area Visitor Express) every day from 10 am to 7pm. The shuttle runs from Downtown Monterey to Cannery Row and the Aquarium, and stops right at the Monterey Conference Center (see next page for a map showing the WAVE bus stops). On Tuesday June 25, Wednesday June 26 and Thursday June 27, the Congress Organizing Committee is arranging a free shuttle bus service between the Marriott Hotel and Carmel. The shuttle will run on a regular basis from the Marriott Hotel to Downtown Carmel (intersection of Ocean Avenue and Junipero) and the Carmel Mission (intersection of Rio Road and Lasuen Drive). The first shuttle will leave the Marriott each day at 9am. On Tuesday and Wednesday, the last shuttle will leave the Carmel Mission at about 5:30 pm, and the last shuttle will leave downtown Carmel at 10pm. On Thursday, the last shuttle will leave the Carmel Mission at 4:30 pm and downtown Carmel at 5pm. For a more detailed schedule, please check at the Information Desk. SIDE TRIPS AND OTHER TRAVEL

There are a number of optional side trips to interesting places outside Monterey. Check at the Information Desk for more information. The Information Desk and the Concierge at the Marriott Hotel can help you with a wide range of other activities and sightseeing trips in the Monterey area.

- 16 -

- 17 -

CONGRESS PROGRAM

- 18 -

SCHEDULE OF ACTIVITIES Sunday, June 23 5:00 – 8:00 pm No-Host Cocktail Reception in the Ferrantes Bayview Room, 10th

Floor, Marriott Hotel, Blues Band: “Dr. Keynes and the Blues Equations” (alias Nick Hanley and Friends).

Monday, June 24 8:00 – 10:00 am Parallel Session 01 10:00 – 10:15 Coffee Break 10:15 – 11:45 Parallel Session 02 11:45 – 1:00 pm Keynote Speech 1:00 – 2:15 Lunch

ERE Managing Editorial Board Meeting 2:15 – 4:15 Parallel Session 03 4:15 – 4:30 Coffee Break 4:30 – 6:00 Parallel Session 04 7:30 – 11:00 Gala Dinner, Monterey Bay Aquarium Tuesday, June 25 8:00 – 10:00 am Parallel Session 05 10:00 – 10:15 Coffee Break 10:15 – 11:45 Parallel Session 06 11:45 – 1:00 pm Keynote Speech 1:00 – 2:15 Lunch

EARE Council Luncheon (by invitation only) ERE Editorial Board Luncheon (by invitation only)

2:15 – 3:45 Parallel Session 07 3:45 – 4:00 Coffee Break 4:00 – 6:00 Parallel Session 08 6:05 – 7:15 EAERE General Assembly AERE Board Meeting (by invitation only)

- 19 -

- 20 -

Wednesday, June 26 8:00 – 10:00 am Parallel Session 09 10:00 – 10:15 Coffee Break 10:15 – 11:45 Parallel Session 10 11:45 – 1:00 pm Keynote Speech Eric Kempe Prize 1:00 – 2:15 Lunch 2:15 – 4:15 Parallel Session 11 4:15 – 4:30 Coffee Break 4:30 – 6:00 Parallel Session 12 6:05 – 7:15 Panel Discussion 13 Thursday, June 27 8:00 – 10:00 am Parallel Session 14 10:00 – 10:15 Coffee Break 10:15 – 11:45 Parallel Session 15 11:45 – 1:00 pm Keynote Speech 1:00 – 2:15 Lunch 2:15 – 4:15 Parallel Session 16 4:15 – 4:30 Coffee Break 4:30 – 6:00 Parallel Session 17 Congress Adjourns

San

Car

los

IS

an C

arlo

s 2

Col

ton

1C

olto

n 2

Col

ton

3Fe

rran

te 1

Ferr

ante

2Fe

rran

te 3

Los

Ang

eles

Parallel Session 04 4:30 - 6:00 pm

Parallel Session 01 8:00 - 10:00 am

Parallel Session 02 10:15 - 11:45 am

Plenary Session S1 11:45 - 1:00 pm

Parallel Session 03 2:15 - 4:15 pm

Mon

day,

Jun

e 24

th 2

002

1I: S

ocia

l Nor

ms

2I: A

gric

ultu

re 1

Ste

inbe

ck F

orum

: Par

tha

Das

gupt

a: D

isco

untin

g: P

ublic

vs.

Priv

ate

and

Con

stan

t vs.

Hyp

erbo

lic

1A: C

limat

e C

hang

e 1

1B:

Mic

roec

onom

ics

of D

efor

esta

tion

1C: F

ores

t 11D

: End

ange

red

Spe

cies

11E

: Bio

econ

omic

M

odel

ing

1F: P

ollu

tion

Con

trol 1

4I: H

edon

ic

Mod

els

1

10:0

0 - 1

0:15

Bre

ak -

Cof

fee

and

Tea

4:15

- 4:

30 p

m B

reak

- S

oft D

rinks

3I: L

and

Man

agem

ent

4A: C

limat

e C

hang

e 4

2A: C

limat

e C

hang

e 2

2B:

Env

ironm

enta

l V

alua

tion

12C

: For

est 2

2D: R

esou

rce

Man

agem

ent

Issu

es

2H: C

onsu

mer

D

eman

d fo

r Q

ualit

y

3H: C

onsu

mer

V

alua

tion

of R

isk

3A: C

limat

e C

hang

e 3

3B:

Env

ironm

enta

l V

alua

tion

2

3C: T

ropi

cal

Def

ores

tatio

n:

Issu

es, R

esea

rch

and

Pol

icy

Pre

scrip

tions

3D: G

row

th

2G: E

nerg

y an

d E

nviro

nmen

tal

Issu

es in

Asi

a

4F: P

ollu

tion

Reg

ulat

ion

2

4G: T

utor

ial:

Intro

duct

ion

to

Mix

ed L

ogit

3E: L

obby

ing

3F: T

he

Geo

grap

hy o

f P

ollu

tion:

E

nviro

nmen

tal

Just

ice

and

Fede

ralis

m

3G: E

colo

gica

l E

cono

mic

s:

Eco

logy

, Ent

ropy

, E

pist

emol

ogy,

an

d E

thic

s

4H: F

ood

Saf

ety

Reg

ulat

ion

from

D

omes

tic a

nd In

t'l

Per

spec

tives

1G: A

sses

sing

E

cono

mic

Im

pact

s on

A

borig

inal

Peo

ple

1H: A

gric

ultu

re,

Env

ironm

ent a

nd

Food

Saf

ety

1:0

0 - 2

:15

pm L

unch

in S

an C

arlo

s III

and

IV o

r Mem

ory

Gar

den

4B: G

reen

A

ccou

ntin

g4C

: For

est 3

4D: D

evel

opm

ent

and

Env

ironm

ent

1

4E:

Env

ironm

enta

l V

alua

tion

3

2E: R

ecre

atio

n2F

: Pol

lutio

n R

egul

atio

n 1

San

Car

los

IS

an C

arlo

s 2

Col

ton

1C

olto

n 2

Col

ton

3Fe

rran

te 1

Ferr

ante

2Fe

rran

te 3

Los

Ang

eles

San

Car

los

3S

an C

arlo

s 4

Los

An g

eles

San

Car

los

1S

an C

arlo

s 2

San

Car

los

3S

an C

arlo

s 4

Col

ton

Com

b.Fe

rran

te 1

Ferr

ante

2Fe

rran

te 3

Los

An g

eles

Parallel Session 08 4:00 - 6:00 pm

Parallel Session 05 8:00 - 10:00 am

Parallel Session 06 10:15 - 11:45 am

Plenary Session S2 11:45 - 1:00 pm

Parallel Session 07 2:15 - 3:45 pm

3:45

- 4:

00 p

m B

reak

- S

oft D

rinks

6A: R

enew

able

R

esou

rces

6B:

Env

ironm

enta

l Ta

xatio

n 1

6C:

Env

ironm

enta

l R

egul

atio

n 2

6D: T

rans

ition

E

cono

mie

s

7B: N

atur

al

Res

ourc

e S

carc

ity7C

: Res

idua

ls M

anag

emen

t

7E: E

xper

imen

tal

Eco

nom

ics

and

the

Env

ironm

ent

2

6E:

Env

ironm

enta

l R

egul

atio

n 1

6F: E

xper

imen

tal

Eco

n. &

the

Env

ironm

ent:

Pas

t, P

rese

nt,

and

Futu

re

8A: H

ouse

hold

D

ecis

ion

Mak

ing

and

Non

mar

ket

Val

uatio

n

8I: T

echn

olog

ical

C

hang

e an

d E

nerg

y

8G: S

usta

inab

le

Dev

elop

men

t

8F:

Env

ironm

enta

l Ta

xatio

n 2

8E: E

xper

imen

tal

Eco

nom

ics

and

the

Env

ironm

ent

3

8D: I

nter

natio

nal

Env

ironm

enta

l A

gree

men

ts

8C: W

ater

Q

uant

ity, Q

ualit

y,

Allo

catio

n an

d V

alua

tion

Issu

es

6G:

Env

ironm

enta

l V

alua

tion

4

5D: D

evlo

pmen

t an

d E

nviro

nmen

t 2

5F: E

xper

imen

tal

Eco

nom

ics

and

Val

uatio

n 1

5G: T

rade

and

th

e E

nviro

nmen

t 1

Tues

day,

Jun

e 25

th 2

002

7D:A

ir P

ollu

tion

and

Hum

an H

ealth

8B: S

patia

l S

truct

ure

7A: P

refe

renc

es

for t

he

Env

ironm

ent

5H: P

ollu

tion

Con

trol 2

10:0

0 - 1

0:15

Bre

ak -

Cof

fee

and

Tea

6H:

Env

ironm

enta

l V

alua

tion

5

8H: G

row

th a

nd

Res

ourc

e A

vaila

bilit

y

5C: H

ouse

hold

Is

sues

5E: T

echn

olog

y A

dopt

ion

1

Col

ton

Com

bine

d

Ste

inbe

ck F

orum

: Dan

iel M

cFad

den

- How

to V

alue

Env

ironm

enta

l Act

ions

Ste

inbe

ck F

orum

5I: L

iabi

lity

6I: M

unic

ipal

Is

sues

and

La

belli

ng

Con

cern

s

5A: W

ater

1:0

0 - 2

:15

pm L

unch

in M

emor

y G

arde

n

5B: N

ew

Dev

elop

men

ts in

Fo

rest

ry &

A

gric

ultu

ral

Car

bon

Seq

uest

riatio

n E

cono

mic

s

San

Car

los

IS

an C

arlo

s 2

Col

ton

1C

olto

n 2

Col

ton

3Fe

rran

te 1

Ferr

ante

2Fe

rran

te 3

Los

Ang

eles

Parallel Session 12 4:30 - 6:00 pm

Parallel Session 13 6:05 - 7:15 pm pm

13G

: Rec

ent

Dev

elop

men

ts in

C

hoic

e M

odel

ling

6:00

- 6:

05 p

m B

reak

12E

: Env

ironm

enta

l P

olic

y Is

sues

12F:

Wat

er12

G: P

ollu

tion

Con

trol 4

12A

: Bio

dive

rsity

412

B: E

nviro

nmen

tal

Val

uatio

n 8

12I:

Land

Pol

icie

s

Parallel Session 09 8:00 - 10:00 am

Parallel Session 10 10:15 - 11:45 am

Plenary Session S3

Parallel Session 11 2:15 - 4:15 pm

12D

: Chi

na &

D

evel

opin

g C

ount

ries

11C

: CG

E M

odel

ling

11D

: In

terd

isci

plin

ary

Met

hods

for P

ublic

H

ealth

Man

agem

ent

in D

evel

opin

g C

ount

ries

11E

: Bio

logi

cal a

nd

Bio

pros

pect

ing

Issu

es11

I: C

oord

inat

ion

11G

: Fis

herie

s 1

11H

: Tec

hnol

ogy

Ado

ptio

n 2

13E

: Env

ironm

enta

l E

cono

mic

s at

the

Wor

ld

Ban

k: A

pplic

atio

ns,

Lim

itatio

ns a

nd J

ob

Opp

urtu

nitie

s

9D: T

ax E

ffect

s

4:15

- 4:

30 p

m B

reak

- S

oft D

rinks

11A

: Bio

dive

rsity

3

9I: W

ater

Pol

lutio

n

10I:

Ren

ewab

le

Res

ourc

es a

nd

Wat

er

9E: D

oubl

e D

ivid

end

Rec

onsi

dere

d9F

: Ene

rgy

and

Mar

kets

9G: C

limat

e C

hang

e 5

10:0

0 - 1

0:15

Bre

ak -

Cof

fee

and

Tea

9H: M

odel

ing

Ris

k an

d U

ncer

tain

ty in

C

aptu

re F

ishe

ries

1:0

0 - 2

:15

pm L

unch

in S

an C

arlo

s III

and

IV o

r Mem

ory

Gar

den

11F:

Val

uatio

n of

S

tatis

tical

Liv

es a

nd

Hea

lth R

isks

11B

: Eco

nom

ics

and

Pol

itics

of I

nt'l

Con

flict

and

C

oope

ratio

n on

N

atur

al a

nd

Env

ironm

enta

l R

esou

rces

10D

: Sus

tain

able

D

evel

opm

ent 1

10F:

Env

ironm

enta

l V

alua

tion

7

10G

: Com

mon

s in

D

evel

opin

g C

ount

ries

10H

: Pol

lutio

n C

ontro

l 3

11:4

5 - 1

:00

pm -

Ste

inbe

ck F

orum

: Mar

tin W

eitz

man

: Inc

ome

and

Sus

tain

abili

ty

10A

: Bio

dive

rsity

210

B: C

limat

e C

hang

e 6

10C

: Env

ironm

enta

l P

olic

y Is

sues

9B: C

onsu

mer

C

hoic

e9C

: Em

issi

on

Per

mits

9A: B

iodi

vers

ity 1

Wed

nesd

ay, J

une

26th

200

2

13H

: Rec

ent

Dev

elop

men

ts in

E

mis

sion

s Tr

adin

g in

E

urop

e &

the

U.S

.

13F:

Fut

ure

Res

earc

h D

irect

ions

in E

nv. A

nd

Res

. Eco

nom

ics

13A

: Unc

erta

inty

, Irr

ever

sibi

litie

s an

d Ti

min

g in

Clim

ate

Reg

ulat

ion

13B

: The

Fut

ure

of

Larg

e W

ater

Pro

ject

s

13C

: Eco

nom

ic

Res

earc

h N

eeds

for

Env

ironm

enta

l Pol

icy

13D

: Im

plem

enta

tion

of

Eco

nom

ic In

stru

men

ts

in L

atin

Am

eric

a

12H

: Tra

de a

nd th

e E

nviro

nmen

t 2

10E

: Env

ironm

enta

l V

alua

tion

6

12C

: Fue

l Tax

es

San

Car

los

IS

an C

arlo

s 2

Col

ton

1C

olto

n 2

Col

ton

3Fe

rran

te 1

Ferr

ante

2Fe

rran

te 3

Los

Ang

eles

17H

: Hea

lth

Effe

cts

14G

: Exh

aust

ible

R

esou

rces

14H

: Pol

lutio

n C

ontro

l and

U

ncer

tain

ty

1:0

0 - 2

:15

pm L

unch

in S

an C

arlo

s III

and

IV o

r Mem

ory

Gar

den

17B

: Cla

ssic

al

Issu

es

17C

: E

nviro

nmen

tal

Val

uatio

n 11

17D

: Pol

lutio

n R

egul

atio

n 5

17E

: Wat

er &

D

evel

opm

ent 2

15E

: E

nviro

nmen

tal

Val

uatio

n 9

15F:

Pol

lutio

n M

arke

ts

15G

: Pro

tect

ing

Cal

iforn

ia's

E

nviro

nmen

t

17F:

Fos

terin

g W

ork

in D

ev.

Cou

ntrie

s Th

roug

h R

egio

nal

Net

wor

ks

17G

: Wet

land

s

16E

: Pop

ulat

ion:

A

n E

ssen

tial

Com

pone

nt o

f E

nviro

nmen

tal

and

Res

ourc

e E

cono

mic

s

16F:

Fis

herie

s 3

16G

: Em

ergi

ng

Issu

es16

H: R

esou

rce

Man

agem

ent

16A

: Dea

ling

with

Tr

ansp

ort

Ext

erna

litie

s in

a

Sec

ond

Bes

t W

orld

1

16B

: Clim

ate

Cha

nge

816

C: H

edon

ic

Mod

els

2

16D

: Sid

e E

ffect

s of

Pol

lutio

n C

ontro

l

17I:

Ris

k

10:0

0 - 1

0:15

Bre

ak -

Cof

fee

and

Tea

4:15

- 4:

30 p

m B

reak

- S

oft D

rinks

16I;

Eco

labe

lling

17A

: Dea

ling

with

Tr

ansp

ort

Ext

erna

litie

s in

a

Sec

ond

Bes

t W

orld

2

15A

: Spa

tial

Mod

ellin

g15

B: S

usta

inab

le

Dev

elop

men

t 3

15C

: Pol

lutio

n C

ontro

l and

In

cent

ive

Effe

cts

15D

: Fis

herie

s 2

15H

: E

nviro

nmen

tal

Val

uatio

n 10

Thur

sday

, Jun

e 27

th 2

002

14I:

Fore

st 4

15I:

Wat

er &

D

evel

opm

ent 1

Ste

inbe

ck F

orum

: Ken

neth

Arr

ow: P

arad

oxes

of S

usta

inab

ility

: The

oret

ical

and

Em

piric

al

14A

: The

E

cono

mic

s of

U

rban

Spr

awl a

nd

Land

Use

Cha

nge

14B

: Air

Pol

lutio

n an

d C

limat

e C

hang

e in

Asi

a14

C: A

gric

ultu

re 2

14D

: Clim

ate

Cha

nge

714

E: D

isco

untin

g

14F:

Tut

oria

l: E

xper

imen

tal

Des

ign

for C

hoic

e E

xper

imen

ts

Parallel Session 17 4:30 - 6:00 pm

Parallel Session 14 8:00 - 10:00 am

Parallel Session 15 10:15 - 11:45 am

Plenary Session S4 11:45 - 1:00 pm

Parallel Session 16 2:15 - 4:15 pm

L I S T O F P A P E R S B Y S E S S I O N S

- 25 -

Sunday, June 23rd 2002 - 5:00 - 8:00 pm Cocktail Reception in the Ferrantes Bayview Room, Marriott Hotel, 10th floor, Blues Band: "Dr. Keynes and the Blues Equations" (alias Nick Hanley and friends). Parallel Session 01 Monday, June 24th 2002 - 8:00 - 10:00 am Session 1A: Climate Change 1 (Chair: Henk Folmer) Carsten Helm, Christoph Böhringer. On The Fair Division Of Greenhouse Gas Abatement Cost (Discussant: Cornelis Van Kooten)

Philippe Quirion. Complying With The Kyoto Protocol Under Uncertainty: Taxes Or Tradable Permits? (Discussant: Carmen Marchiori)

Christoph Böhringer. Climate Politics From Kyoto To Bonn: From Little To Nothing? (Discussant: Andries Nentjes)

Dallas Burtraw, Karen Palmer, Anthony Paul, Ranjit Bharvirkar. The Effect Of Allowance Allocation On The Cost Of Carbon Emission Trading (Discussant: Till Requate)

Session 1B: Microeconomics Of Deforestation (Chair: Shanti Gamper Rabindran) Alix Peterson Zwane. Does Poverty Constrain Deforestation? Econometric Evidence From Peru (Discussant: Arild Angelsen)

Shanti Gamper Rabindran. The Role Of Education And Expenditure Shocks In Forest Clearance Empirical Evidence From Indigenous Households In Bolivia's Protected Areas (Discussant: Douglas Southgate)

Monica Fisher, Gerald Shively. Activity Choice, Labor Allocation And Forest Use In Malawi (Discussant: David Kaimowitz)

Yoshito Takasaki, Brad Barham, Oliver Coomes. Risk Coping Strategies In Topical Forests: Floods,

Asset Inequality, And Natural Resource Extraction (Discussant: Tom Reardon)

Session 1C: Forest 1 (Chair: Karl-Gustaf Lofgren) Aldo Cerda Molina, Valentina Lira. The Economics Of Sustainable Forest Management Certification (Discussant: Duncan Knowler)

Anne-Juliane Huennemeyer, Kimberly Rollins. Private Resource Management And Public Trust: Optimal Resource Conservation Contracts Under Asymmetric Information (Discussant: Dominic Moran)

Subhrendu K Pattanayak, D T Butry. Complementarity Of Forests And Farms: A Spatial Econometric Approach To Ecosystem Valuation In Indonesia (Discussant: Tracy Boyer)

Ville Malkonen. Timber Importing Versus Bargaining And Optimal Forest Conservation (Discussant: Gregory Amacher)

Session 1D: Endangered Species 1 (Chair: Dan Huppert) Frank Wätzold, Karin Johst, Martin Drechsler. An Ecological-Economic Modelling Procedure To Design Compensation Payments For The Efficient Spatio-Temporal Allocation Of Species Protection Measures (Discussant: Mario Teisl)

Mattias Boman, Jens Persson, Goran Bostedt. The Bioeconomics Of The Spatial Distribution Of An Endangered Species: The Case Of The Swedish Wolf Population (Discussant: James Shortle)

Anne Borge Johannesen. Conservation Policies And Incentives To Hunt: An Empirical Analysis Of Illegal Hunting In Western Serengeti, Tanzania (Discussant: Rolf Groeneveld)

Christian Langpap, Junjie Wu. Voluntary Conservation Of Endangered Species: When Does "No Surprises" Mean No Conservation? (Discussant: Alex Pfaff)

- 26 -

Session 1E: Bioeconomic Modeling (Chair: Peder Andersen) David Finnoff, John Tschirhart. Harvesting In An Eight Species Ecosystem (Discussant: Niels Vestergaard)

Carolyn Fischer. The Complex Interactions Of Markets For Endangered Species Products (Discussant: Wolfram Schlenker)

Rögnvaldur Hannesson. Aquaculture And Fisheries (Discussant: Ivar Strand)

Session 1F: Pollution Control 1 (Chair: Nathaniel Keohane) Rimjhim Aggarwal, Erik Lichtenberg. Environmental Regulation In Vertically Coordinated Industries (Discussant: Albert Schram)

Hongli Feng. Alternative Intertemporal Permit Trading Regimes With Stochastic Abatement Costs (Discussant: Eirik Romstad)

Cathrine Hagem, Ottar Mæstad. Market Power In The Market For Greenhouse Gas Emission Permits: Impacts On The European Gas Market (Discussant: Raul O'Ryan)

Angels Xabadia, Renan Goetz, David Zilberman. Dynamics Of Controlling Pollution Stock When Producers Are Heterogeneous (Discussant: John Antle)

Session 1G: Assessing Economic Impacts On Aboriginal People: Environmental Valuation And Damage Assessment In A Cross Cultural Context. (Chair: W. L. Adamowicz) Peter Boxall, Vic Adamowicz, Michael Haener, Yaoqi Zhang. Assessing The Impacts Of Forest Management On Aboriginal Hunters: Evidence From Stated And Revealed Preference Data. (Discussant: David Chapman)

Armando Gonzalez-Caban, Halyley Hesseln, John Loomis. CVM To Native Americans In Montana: How Well Did It Work? (Discussant: Kimberly Rollins)

Philip Meyer. Setting Up Accounts And Framing Valuation Enquiries In A Cross-Cultural Setting: Lessons From Snake River And Beyond. (Discussant: Tom Brown)

John Duffield, Chris Neher, David Patterson. Valuing Foregone Tribal Use: A Case Study Of The Penobscot Nation. (Discussant: Dale Whittington)

Session 1H: Agriculture, Environment And Food Safety (Chair: Sandra Hoffmann) Andreas Boecker. Public Health And The Use Of Antibiotics In Animal Husbandry (Discussant: Silvia Secchi)

Alain Carpentier, Karine Latouche, Pierre Rainelli. Food Safety In The Demand For Meat Quality: The Case Of Pork Chops In France (Discussant: Gary Thompson)

Peter Frykblom, Johan Andersson. Exploring Nonmarket Values For The Social Impact Of Farm Animal Welfare Legislation (Discussant: Alain Carpentier)

David Sunding, Sean Cash, David Zilberman. Pesticide Use And Food Safety (Discussant: Elise Golan)

Session 1I: Social Norms (Chair: Basil Sharp) Mario Cogoy. Dematerialisation, Time Allocation, And The Service Economy (Discussant: Richard Norgaard)

Rabindra Nath Chakraborty. Egalitarianism And Resource Conservation In Hunter-Gatherer Societies (Discussant: Erin Sills)

Joelle Noailly, Jeroen Van Den, Cees Withagen. Spatial Evolution Of Social Norms In A Common-Pool Resource Game (Discussant: Daniel Rondeau)

María Xosé Vázquez Rodríguez, Carmelo J León. Altruism And The Economic Values Of Environmental And Social Policies (Discussant: Mireille Chiroleu-Assouline)

- 27 -

Parallel Session 02 Monday, June 24th 2002 - 10:15 - 11:45 am Session 2A: Climate Change 2 (Chair: Ralph D'Arge) Till Requate, Ulf Moslener. Optimal Abatement Strategies For Various Interacting Greenhouse Gases

Christophe Pereau, Sandrine Mathy, Tarik Tazdait. Possibility Of Scission In The Climate Change Negotiations

Camilla Bretteville, Fredric Menz. Is The Kyoto Protocol Necessary For Climate Control?

Xueqin Zhu, Ekko Van Ierland. Modeling The Effects Of The Enlargement Of The Eu On Trade And The Environment: An Applied General Equilibrium Modeling Approach

Jean-Charles Hourcade, Frédéric Ghersi. The Economics Of A Lost Deal

Andries Nentjes, Ger Klaassen. On The Quality Of Compliance Mechanisms In The Kyoto Protocol

Stephane De Cara, Gilles Rotillon. Strategic Dimensions Of Multi-Greenhouse Gas International Agreements

Session 2B: Environmental Valuation 1 (Chair: Douglas Shaw) Anna Alberini, Alberto Longo, Peter Meyer, Stefania Tonin. The Role Of Liability, Regulation And Economic Incentives In Brownfield Remediation And Redevelopment: Evidence From Surveys Of Developers In Europe And The U.S.

John C Whitehead, Timothy C Haab, George R Parsons. The Effects Of Information Conveyance On Risk Perceptions, Demand And Willingness To Pay

Ted Gayer, Jeffrey Zabel. "Objective" Versus "Subjective" Environmental Risks: The Case Of Superfund Sites In Woburn, Massachusetts

Anne Rozan, Anne Stenger, Marc Willinger. The Effect Of Heavy Metal Content On Food Pricing Behaviour: BDM Versus Second Price Auction

David S Brookshire, Philip Ganderton. A Web-Based Risk Experiment: Design And Implementation

Jeffrey Englin, Thomas Holmes, Rebecca Niell. Endogenous Risk And Off Road Vehicle Use and Analysis Of Alcohol Consumption And Injury

Session 2C: Forest 2 (Chair: Chantal Carpentier) Heidi J Albers, Elizabeth J Z Robinson, Jeffrey C Williams. Property Rights And Extraction In Government Forests In Developing Countries: Spatial And Temporal Considerations

Jeffrey P Prestemon. The Economics Of Timber Salvage After Catastrophic Wildfire: The Case Of The Bitterroot Timber Salvage

Madhusudan Bhattarai, Machael Hammig. Governance, Economic Policy, And The Environmental Kuznets Curve For Natural Tropical Forests

Bobur Alimov. European Union's Generalized System Of Preferences And Tropical Deforestation: The Perfect Bayesian Equilibrium In A Signaling Game

U A D P Gunawardena, G Edwards-Jones. Spatial Variation Of Non-Use Values Of Tropical Rain Forests: Identification Of Intrinsic Versus Perceived Motives For Conservation

Margaret Insley, Kimberly Rollins. The Effect Of Harvesting Restrictions On The Value Of A Timber Investment With Uncertain Prices

Pamela J Mason, Duncan J Knowler. Sustainable Multiple-Use Forest Management: An Analysis Of The Terai Forests Of Nepal

Session 2D: Resource Management Issues (Chair: Keith Knapp)

- 28 -

Jean-Daniel Saphores. Harvesting A Renewable Resource Under Uncertainty

Rafael Reuveny, John W Maxwell. Continuing Conflict

Niels Vestergaard, Frank Jensen. A Principal-Agent Analysis Of Fisheries

Ellen Burnes, Enrique Thomann, Edward C Waymire. The Optimal Economic Management Of A Renewable Natural Resource Under Price And Stock Uncertainty

Baishali Bakshi, Jean-Daniel Saphores. Managing Wildlife Populations Under Uncertainty: Cutting Slack To Both Grandma And The Wolf

Nathaniel O Keohane, Benjamin Van Roy, Richard J Zeckhauser. Controlling Stocks And Flows: The Environment, With Applications To Physical And Human Capital

Rafael Reuveny, Kerry Krutilla. Endogenous Population Growth, Renewable Resources, And Nonlinear Dynamics

Richard E Howitt, Arnaud Reynaud, Siwa Msangi, Keith Knapp. Calibrated Stochastic Dynamic Models For Resource Management

Session 2E: Recreation (Chair: Tim Haab) Daniel J Phaneuf. Pivots And Shifts: The Implications Of The Opportunity Cost Of Time Specification On Recreation Behavior

Roger H Von Haefen. What Are The Welfare Implications Of Introducing General Correlation Patterns Into Demand System Models?

Bill Provencher, Richard C Bishop. 'Mental Accounts' And Their Consequences For Realistic Modeling Of Recreation Behavior

Chia-Yu Yeh, Brent L Sohngen, Timothy C Haab. Modeling Multiple-Objective Recreation Trips With Choices Over Trip Duration And Alternative Sites

Daniel K Lew, Douglas M Larson. Jointly Estimating Recreational Choices And The Shadow Value Of Leisure Time

Craig Mohn, Michael Hanemann, Linwood H Pendleton, David Layton. Correcting Bias From A Partial Increase In Precision In Cost Construction In Travel Cost Modeling

Douglas M Larson, Daniel K Lew, James M Barrett. Measuring The Effects Of The "Timing Of Time"

Session 2F: Pollution Regulation 1 (Chair: Tom Crocker) Francisco Alpizar, Till Requate, Albert Schram. Collective Versus Random Fining: An Experimental Study On Controlling Non-Point Pollution

Cathrine Hagem, Ottar Mæstad, Hege Westskog. Effective Enforcement And Imprecise Deterrents: Impacts Of Punishment On Punishers Via The Markets For Quotas And Energy.

Ulf Moslener, Till Requate. Optimal Abatement Of Stock Pollutants When Pollutants Are Complements Or Substitutes

Savas Alpay. Economic Development, Trade And Environmental Quality: Environmental Kuznets Curve Hypothesis In A Threshold Model

Havard Solem. Pollution Control In The Presence Of Natural Decay And Radical Uncertainty

Eirik Romstad. Nonpoint Source Pollution Contracts: Emission Based Regulations Through Models

Michael Toman, Carolyn Fischer, Cees Withagen. Optimal Investment In Clean Production Capacity

Marita Laukkanen. Estimation Of Resource Management Objectives Through Empirical Likelihood: How Far Is Regulators' Dynamic Behavior From The Economists’ Ideal?

Session 2G: Energy And Environmental Issues In Asia (Chair: Jeffrey Vincent)

- 29 -

David Dole, Piya Abeygunawardena. The Role Of Environmental Economics At The ADB

Alan Dale Gonzales. Financing Issues And Options For Energy Efficiency, Renewable Energy, And Greenhouse Gas Abatement Projects In Asia

Herath Gunatileka, N Dissanayake. An Assessment Of Energy Substitution Possibilities In The Sri Lankan Economy

Deshun Liu, Lu Xuedu. Opportunities For Greenhouse Gas Mitigation By Improving Energy Efficiency In China

Phares Parayno. Energy Efficiency In A Restructured Electric Industry In The Phillippines

Ji Zou. Assessing Climate Technology Needs In Developing Countries: Concepts, Methodologies, And Experiences

Session 2H: Consumer Demand For Quality (Chair: Sandra Hoffmann) Kyrre Rickertsen, Wen Chern. Consumer Acceptance Of GMO: Survey Results From Japan, Norway, Taiwan, And The U. S. (Discussant: Jill McCluskey)

Jill McCluskey, Hiromi Ouchi. Consumer Response To Genetically Modified Food Products In Japan (Discussant: Kyrre Rickertsen)

Katrin Millock, Mette Wier, Lars Gaarn Hansen. Willingness To Pay For Organic Foods: A Comparison Between Survey Data And Panel Data From Denmark (Discussant: Gary Thompson)

Gary Thompson, K Glaser. National Demand For Selected Organic Foods (Discussant: Lars Garn Hansen)

Session 2I: Agriculture 1 (Chair: Kathleen Segerson) Michael J Roberts, Shawn Bucholtz. Slippage Or Spurious Correlation: A Re-Analysis Of The Conservation Reserve Program

Giovanni Signorello, Joseph Cooper. Farmer Premiums For The Voluntary Adoption Of Conservation Plans

Michael A Taylor, Brent Sohngen, Haci Isik, Alan Randall. Testing Group Performance Contracts For Controlling Agricultural Pollution

Carol Mansfield, Subhrendu Pattanayak, William Mcdow. What Drives Voluntary Preservation?

Erik Lichtenberg. Tenancy And Soil Conservation In Market Equilibrium

Lyubov Kurkalova, Catherine Kling, Jinhua Zhao. Multiple Environmental Externalities Of Conservation Tillage: Empirical Assessment Of Practice And Performance Based Targeting

Karen M Jetter, Karen M Klonsky. An Economic Analysis Of Public Policies To Restore Private Land

Debahatra Lahiri. Use Of Sewerage Water Of Calcutta Metropolitan City For Generation Of Income From Paddy-Cum-Fish Farming In A Sustainable Manner

Session S1: Steinbeck Forum 1 Monday, June 24th 2002 - 11:45 - 1:00 pm (Chair: Charles Kolstad) Partha Dasgupta. Discounting: Public Versus Private And Constant Versus Hyperbolic

ERE Managing Editorial Board Meeting (Santa Monica Room) Monday, June 24th 2002 - 1:00 pm - 2:15pm Parallel Session 03 Monday, June 24th 2002 - 2:15 - 4:15 pm Session 3A: Climate Change 3 (Chair: Harmen Verbruggen) Andreas Löschel, Zhongxiang Zhang. The Economic And Environmental Implications Of The U.S. Repudiation Of The Kyoto Protocol And The Subsequent Deals In Bonn And Marrakech (Discussant: Ulf Moslener)

- 30 -

Barbara Buchner, Carlo Carraro, Igor Cersosimo. On The Consequences Of The U.S. Withdrawal From The Kyoto/Bonn Protocol (Discussant: Stephane De Cara)

Claudia Kemfert. Economic Impact Assessment Of Alternative Climate Policy Strategies (Discussant: Taran Faehn)

Session 3B: Environmental Valuation 2 (Chair: Alan Randall) Roberto Leon-Gonzalez, Jorge Araña, Carmelo León. Single Or Double Bounded Contingent Valuation? A Bayesian Test (Discussant: Nicholas Flores)

Paulo Ald Nunes, Erik Schokkaert. Warm Glow And Embedding In Contingent Valuation (Discussant: Kenji Takeuchi)

Glenn W Harrison. Contingent Valuation Meets The Experts: A Critique Of The NOAA Panel Report (Discussant: John Duffield)

Christopher Leggett, Naomi Kleckner, Kevin J Boyle, John Duffield. Evidence Of Social Desirability Bias Contingent Valuation Surveys Administered Through In-Person Interviews. (Discussant: Susana Mourato)

Session 3C: Tropical Deforestation: Issues, Research And Policy Prescriptions (Chair: Tom Tomich) (Panel Discussants: Heidi Albers and John Antle) Cheryl Palm, Jim Gockowski, Tom Tomich, Steve Vosti. Starting From The Bottom: Analyses Of Land Use Systems

Chantal Line Carpentier, Steve Vosti, Julie Witcover. Moving To The Farm Level: A Bioeconomic Model Of Resource Use In The Western Brazilian Amazon

Frank Place, Keijiro Otsuka. Resource Tenure And Resource Use: Views From The Household And Community Levels

Andrea Cattaneo. Sorting Out The Forests From The Trees: Macroeconomic Policy, Extra-Regional Trends And Deforestation In Brazil

Marian S delos Angeles. Paying The Bill For Forest Preservation: Environmental Services Payments And Ecosystem Stewardship

Session 3D: Growth (Chair: Raymond Kopp) Rabindra Nath Chakraborty. Rural Environmental Degradation, Growth, And Income Distribution In A Structuralist Two-Sector Model (Discussant: Jesse Czelusta)

Ariaster B Chimeli, John B Braden. Economic Growth And The Dynamics Of Environmental Quality (Discussant: Alexander Golub)

Clas Eriksson, Joakim Persson. Economic Growth, Inequality, Democratization And The Environment (Discussant: Susana Ferreira)

Thomas Berger. Environment, Migration And Technological Change: Modeling The Dynamic Decision-Making Process At Farm-Household Level (Discussant: Amos Zemel)

Session 3E: Lobbying (Chair: Wallace Oates) W Bowman Cutter, J R Deshazo. Who's Responsible? How The Assignment Of Regulatory Authority Influences Regulatory Effort (Discussant: Wen Chern)

Hossein Farzin, Jinhua Zhao. Pollution Abatement Investment When Firms Lobby Against Environmental Regulation (Discussant: Michael Ash)

Peter Berck, Christopher Costello. Efficiency Controls And The Captured Fishery Regulator (Discussant: Moriki Hosoe)

Edward B Barbier, Richard Damania. Lobbying, Trade And Resource Conversion (Discussant: Carol McAusland)

Session 3F: The Geography Of Pollution: Environmental Justice And Federalism (Chair: V K Smith)

- 31 -

Ann Wolverton. Does Race Matter? An Examination Of Polluting Plants' Location Decisions (Discussant: Matthew Kahn)

Randy Becker. Pollution Abatement Expenditure By U.S. Manufacturing Plants: Do Community Characteristics Matter? (Discussant: Eli Berman)

Wayne Gray, Ron Shadbegian. Optimal Pollution Abatement: Whose Benefits Matter, And How Much? (Discussant: Arik Levinson)

Hilary Sigman. Federalism And Transboundary Pollution: Water Quality In U.S. Rivers (Discussant: Anna Alberini)

Session 3G: Ecological Economics: Ecology, Entropy, Epistemology, And Ethics (Chair: Richard B Norgaard) (Panel Discussants: Presenters and O. P. Chopra) Charles Perrings. Ecological And Economic System Dynamics

Stefan Baumgartner. Thermodynamics And The Economics Of Absolute Scarcity

Richard Norgaard. Epistemological Complications Of Ecological Economics

Richard Howarth. Equity And Efficiency In Ecological Economics

Session 3H: Consumer Valuation Of Risk (Chair: Katrin Millock) David Zilberman. Food Safety Policies: Science Versus Beliefs (Discussant: Estelle Gozlan)

Anne Rozan, Florence Spitzenstetter, Anne Stenger. A Contingent Valuation Of Risk Perception For Heavy Metals In Food: Some Complementary Indicators (Discussant: Peter Frykblom)

Paul Kivi, Jason Shogren. Ambiguity In Food Safety Valuation (Discussant: Marc Willinger)

Joshua Graff Zivin. Ensuring A Safe Food Supply: The Importance Of Heterogeneity (Discussant: To be announced )

Session 3I: Land Management (Chair: Aldo Cerda) Jay P Shimshack, Jeffrey T Lafrance, Steven Wu. Crop Insurance And The Extensive Margin (Discussant: Valentina Lira)

Anders Skonhoft, Nils Stenseth, Herwig Leirs. The Bioeconomics Of Controlling An African Rodent Pest Species (Discussant: Baishali Bakshi)

Rolf Groeneveld, Frank Van Langevelde. Land Trade, Transaction Costs, And The Optimal Configuration Of Nature Conservation (Discussant: Henry Thille)

Jeffrey R Vincent, Marco Boscolo. Potential Welfare Gains Under Specialized Forest Management (Discussant: Eric Lichtenberg)

Parallel Session 04 Monday, June 24th 2002 - 4:30 - 6:00 pm Session 4A: Climate Change 4 (Chair: Elena Strukova) Zhongxiang Zhang, Lucas Assunção. Domestic Climate Policies And The WTO

Kirsten Halsnæs. Climate Change And Sustainable Development – Case Studies From Developing Countries

Greg Murtough, David Appels, Anna Matysek, Knox Lovell. Why Greenhouse Gas Emissions Matter When Estimating Productivity Growth: An Application To Australian Electricity Generation

Anna Heaney, Stephen Beare. Impacts Of Climate Change On Instream And Dryland Salinity In The Murray Darling Basin, Australia

Brita Bye, Snorre Kverndokk, Knut Einar Rosendahl. Mitigation Costs, Distributional Effects And Ancillary Benefits Of Carbon Policies In The Nordic Countries, The UK And Ireland

William A Masters. Climate As A Resource

Sahin Sebnem. Turkey Faces The Climate Change Problem: An Analysis Within A General Equilibrium

- 32 -

Model With An Emission Tax And A Tradable Emission Permits System

Session 4B: Green Accounting (Chair: Nicholas Flores) Geir B Asheim, Wolfgang Buchholz. Progress, Sustainability, And Comprehensive National Accounting

Anni Huhtala, Eva Samakovlis. Green Accounting, Air Pollution And Health

Mattias Boman, Anni Huhtala, Charlotte Nilsson, Sofia Ahlroth. Applying The Contingent Valuation Method In Resource Accounting: A Bold Attempt

Sara Aniyar. Accounting For Oil Wealth In Venezuela And Norway. Open Issuen When Linking Theory To Practice.

Susana Ferreira, Jeffrey R Vincent. Why Genuine Savings?

Session 4C: Forest 3 (Chair: Kurt Schwabe) Ronaldo Seroa Da Motta. Consumption Pattern And Environmental Pressure In Brazil

P C Roebeling, E Hendrix, R Ruben. Deforestation Due To Uncertainty In Land And Capital Prices: The Case Of Cattle Ranching In The Humid Tropics Of Costa Rica

Andrea Cattaneo. The Role Of Agronomic Sustainability And Logging In Determining Deforestation In The Brazilian Amazon

Bobur Alimov, Kathleen Segerson. Tropical Deforestation In Indonesia: The Use Of Positive Trade Measures

Daniel Gbetnkom. Deforestation In Cameroon: Immediate Causes And Consequences.

Khathu M Sikhitha, Samuel M Bwalya. Urban Fuelwood Supply And Deforestation In Zambia

Session 4D: Development And Environment 1 (Chair: Anil Markandya) Ross Mckitrick, Joanne Liang. The Direction Of Causality Between Income Growth And Air Quality Changes In Toronto, 1973-1997.

Jules Reinhart. Is Economic Growth Bad For Your Health? Industrial Pollution Versus Industrial Growth In Indonesia

Shyamsunder Pd Sharma, Chaiti Sharma Biswas. Does Poverty Harm Environment? Evidence From An Indian Village

Matthew E Kahn. Has Communism's Collapse Greened Eastern Europe's Polluted Cities?

Marzio Galeotti, Alessandro Lanza , Francesco Pauli. Desperately Seeking (Environmental) Kuznets: A New Look At The Evidence

Fabio Granja E Barros, Augusto F Mendonça, Jorge M Nogueira. How Social Inequality Affects The Relationship Between Economic Growth And Environmental Degradation: The Kuznets Environmental Curve In The Brazilian Case

Alain Bousquet, Pascal Favard. Does Kuznets' Belief Question The Environmental Kuznets Curves?

Urvashi Narain, Shreekant Gupta, Klaas van 't Veld. Poverty And The Environment: Estimating The Effect Of Natural Resource Availability On Household Incomes In Rural India

Session 4E: Environmental Valuation 3 (Chair: Paulo Nunes) William R Sutton, Douglas M Larson, Lovell S Jarvis. A New Approach To Contingent Valuation For Assessing The Costs Of Living With Wildlife In Developing Countries

Estelle Motte, Robert Hearne. Choice Experiments: A Way To Investigate Public Preferences About Biodiversity Conservation Within A Framework Of Environmental Services Payments

- 33 -

Giovanni Signorello, Sandra Notaro. Testing Sensitivity To Scope In A Contingent Valuation Survey: The Case Study Of Baldo-Garda Natural Park (Italy)

Matías González, Carmelo J León. Consumption Process And Multiple Valuation Of Landscape Attributes

Hua Wang, Benoit Laplante, Xun Wu, Craig Meisner. Measuring Willingness-To-Pay For The Restoration Of Lake Sevan

Hilary Anderson. The Economics Of Wildlife In South Africa

Marcos Adamson, Federico Castillo. Using Contingent Valuation To Estimate Prices For Non-Market Amenities Provided By Protected Areas

Session 4F: Pollution Regulation 2 (Chair: Richard Newell) Konstantinos Giannakas, Jonathan D Kaplan. Estimating An Environmental Auditing Game: The Case Of Conservation Compliance On Highly Erodible Land

Murat Isik. Environmental Regulation And The Optimal Location Of The Firm Under Uncertainty

Robert D Mohr. Environmental Performance Standards And The Adoption Of Technology

Frank Dietz, Nico Hoogervorst. Goals For Environmental Policies: Analyzing The Role Of Politicians And Economists

Kathleen Segerson, Junjie Wu. Voluntary Approaches To Nonpoint Pollution Control: A New Role For Ambient Taxes

Amy Buss-Gautam, Rita Curtis, Mary Ahearn, Rebecca Lent. Industry Structure And Government Support Of Renewable Resource Industries: Agriculture And Fisheries

Aloyce R M Kaliba, David W Norman, Yang Ming Chang. Willingness To Pay To Improve Domestic Water Supply In Rural Areas Of Central Tanzania: Implications For Policy

Kenneth Richards. Trading Ratios For Hybrid Policy Instruments: Implications Of Excess Burden

Session 4G: Tutorial Ken Train. An Introduction To Mixed Logit Modelling (1.5 Hours)

Session 4H: Food Safety Regulation From Domestic And International Perspectives (Chair: Katrin Millock) Laurian Unnevehr. New Approaches To Food Safety Regulation And Provision Of Information: What Are The Implications For International Trade? (Discussant: Mike Margolis)

Mario Teisl, Julie Caswell. Information Policy And Genetically Modified Food: Weighing The Benefits And Costs (Discussant: Philippe Bontems)

Brian Roe, Ian Sheldon. The Impacts Of Labeling On The Production And Trade Of Vertically Differentiated Goods With Process Attributes (Discussant: Philippe Bontems)

Elise Golan, Fred Krutchler. Food Safety Principles: Setting Standards For International Trade (Discussant: Mike Margolis)

Session 4I: Hedonic Models 1 (Chair: Greg Poe) Peter Hess. Hedonic Estimation And Economic Geography

Toshihide Arimura. Pollution-Permit Market Efficiency: Hedonic Prices Of Sulfur In Coal Under The U.S. SO2 Allowance Market

Michael Papenfus, Bill Provencher. An Economic Analysis Of Ecology-Based Restrictions On Lakefront Development

Bonnie Colby, Steven Wishart. Hedonic Valuation Of Water-Dependent Environmental Amenities

Sérgio A Batalhone, Jorge M Nogueira, Bernardo P M Mueller. Economics Of Air Pollution: Hedonic

- 34 -

Price Model And Smell Consequences Of Sewage Treatment Plants In Urban Areas.

Mette Termansen, Colin Mcclean. Recreational Value Of Landscape Changes

Diane Hite, Alan Randall, Brent Sohngen. The Welfare And Equity Implications Of Environmental Disamenities: A Survival Model Approach

Monday, June 24rd 2002 - 7:30 - 11:00 pm Gala Dinner at the Monterey Aquarium Parallel Session 05 Tuesday, June 25th 2002 - 8:00 - 10:00 am Session 5A: Water (Chair: Mordechai Shechter) Charles W Howe. Jurisdictional Externalities, River Basins And Expanded Water Markets: Increased Economic Efficiency Through Institutional Reform (Discussant: Dan Huppert)

Céline Nauges, Richard Blundell. Estimating Residential Water Demand Under Block Rate Pricing: A Nonparametric Approach (Discussant: Sushenjit Bandyopadhyay)

Henrik Scharin. Net-Gains Of An Efficient Allocation Of Abatement Measures In Improving The Environmental State Of Coastal Zones: A Study Of The Nitrogen Load To The Stockholm Archipelago (Discussant: Mary Ewers)

Session 5B: New Developments In Forestry And Agricultural Carbon Sequestriation Economics (Chair: Kenneth Richards) (Panel Discussants: Catherine Kling, Kenneth Richards, Brent Sohngen)

John Antle, Susan Capalbo, Sian Mooney, Edward Elliot. Spatial Heterogeneity, Contract Design, And The Efficiency Of Carbon Sequestration Policies For Agriculture

Suzi Kerr, Alex Pfaff, Arturo Sanchez, William Power. The Dynamics Of Deforestation: Evidence From Costa Rica

Andrew Plantinga, JunJie Wu. Co-Benefit From Carbon Sequestration In Forests: An Evaluation Of The Reductions In Agricultural Externalities From An Afforestation Policy In Wisconsin

Pavel Suchanek, Sabina Shaikh, Cornelis van Kooten. Carbon Incentive Mechanisms And Land-Use Implications For Canadian Agriculture

Session 5C: Household Issues (Chair: Julie Hewitt) Karen Palmer, Margaret Walls. Economic Analysis Of The Product Stewardship Movement: Understanding Costs, Effectiveness, And The Role For Policy (Discussant: Kelly Maguire)

Ram Chandra Bhattarai. Household Behavior On Solid Waste Management: A Case Of Kathmandu Metropolitan City (Discussant: Bevin Ashenmiller)

Jon Strand. Public And Private Good Values Of Statistical Lives: Results From A Combined Choice-Experiment And Contingent-Valuation Study (Discussant: Chris Leggett)

Karine Nyborg , Annegrete Bruvoll. On The Value Of Households' Recycling Efforts (Discussant: Jeffrey Zabel)

Session 5D: Development And Environment 2 (Chair: Eric English) Dale Whittington. Improving The Performance Of Contingent Valuation Studies In Developing Countries (Discussant: Robert Rowe)

Bhim Adhikari. Property Rights And Natural Resource: Socio-Economic Heterogeneity And Distributional Implications Of Common Property Resource Management In Nepal (Discussant: Linda Fernandez)

Jill L Caviglia-Harris. Sustainable Agricultural Practices In Rondônia, Brazil: Do Local Farmer Organizations Impact Adoption Rates? (Discussant: Urvashi Narain)

- 35 -

Rimjhim Aggarwal, Tulika Narayan. Does Inequality Lead To Greater Efficiency In The Use Of Local Commons? The Role Of Strategic Investments And Credit Market Imperfections (Discussant: Stephen Beare)

Session 5E: Technology Adoption 1 (Chair: Joe Cooper) Rob Hart. Endogenous Growth, Environment And Innovation -- A Model With Environmentally Oriented Research And Two Production Vintages. (Discussant: Robert Mohr)

Allen Blackman, Arne Kildegaard. Clean Technological Change In Developing-Country Industrial Clusters: Mexican Leather Tanning (Discussant: Jim Opaluch)

Murat Isik. Incentives For Technology Adoption Under Environmental Policy Uncertainty: Implications For Green Payment Programs (Discussant: Ron Shadbegian)

Peter Mulder, Henri Groot. Explaining Slow Diffusion Of Energy Saving Technologies (Discussant: Surender Kumar)

Session 5F: Experimental Economics And Valuation 1 (Chair: Catherine Kling) Kent Messer, Gregory Poe, Daniel Rondeau, William Schulze. Altruism And Wtp In A Coercive Tax Setting (Discussant: Susan Chilton)

Richard Carson, Theodore Groves, John List, Mark Machina. Probabilistic Influence And Supplemental Benefits: A Field Test Of The Two Key Assumptions Underlying Stated Preferences (Discussant: Glenn Harrison)

Glenn Harrison. Experimental Economics And Contingent Valuation (Discussant: Gregory Poe)

A C Burton, Katherine Carson, Susan Chilton, W G Hutchinson. Make It A Double? Experimental Insights Into Dichotomous Choice Mechanisms (Discussant: Catherine Kling)

Session 5G: Trade And The Environment 1 (Chair: Michael Hoel) Essi Eerola. International Trade Agreements, Environmental Policy, And Emergence Of Multinational Firms (Discussant: Meeta Mehra)

Stephen F Hamilton, Till Requate. Vertical Structure And Strategic Environmental Trade Policy (Discussant: Ann Wolverton)

Bruce Larson, Eri Nicolaides, Bashir Al Zu'Bi, Nabil Sukkar. The Impact Of Environmental Regulations On Exports: Case Study Results From Cyprus, Jordan, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, And Turkey (Discussant: Alberto Garrido)

Session 5H: Pollution Control 2 (Chair: Trudy Cameron) Carl Pasurka, Shawna Grosskopf, Rolf Fare. Estimating Pollution Abatement Costs: A Comparison Of "Stated" And "Revealed" Approaches (Discussant: Jeffrey Lazo)

Smita Misra. Use Of Contingent Valuation Method For Measuring Benefits From Water Pollution Abatement By An Industrial Estate In India (Discussant: Jerald Fletcher)

Amyaz A Moledina, Jay S Coggins, Stephen Polasky, Christopher Costello. Dynamic Environmental Policy With Strategic Firms: Prices Versus Quantities.

J R Deshazo, Andres V Lerner. A Positive Theory Of Standard-Setting Behavior With An Application To The Clean Water Act (Discussant: Janie Chermak)

Session 5I: Liability (Chair: Norman Meade) Signe Krarup. Collective Agreements: Incentive Contracts With Group Punishments (Discussant: John Stranlund)

Benedicte Coestier, Estelle Gozlan, Stephan Marette. Prevention, Limited Liability And Market Structure (Discussant: Alberto Longo)

- 36 -

Lire Ersado, Gregory S Amacher, Jeffrey Alwang. Economic Analysis Of Development Projects With Health Side Effects (Discussant: Richard Woodward)

Emma Hutchinson, Klaas van't Veld. Extended Liability For Environmental Accidents: What You See Is What You Get (Discussant: Montserrat Viladrich-Grau)

Parallel Session 06 Tuesday, June 25th 2002 - 10:15 - 11:45 am Session 6A: Renewable Resources (Chair: Peter J. Parks) Linda Fernandez. A Diversified Portfolio: Joint Management Of Nonrenewable And Renewable Resources Offshore

Wolfram Schlenker, Brian D Wright. Optimal Extraction Of A Exhaustible Resource With An Uncertain Stock Size

Mike Young. Unpacking The Bundle: Is There A Generic Tradeable Property Right Structure?

Roger Salmons. Tradable Compliance Credits For Extended Producer Responsibility: Market Power And The Allocation Of Initial Property Rights

John Livernois, Henry Thille, X Zhang. Hotelling's R Per Cent Rule: An Empirical Test Using Old-Growth Timber Data

Sylvia Brandt. Efficiency Versus Equity: The Impact Of Property Rights On Industry Structure

Pascal Da Costa, Francesco Ricci, Katheline Schubert. The Direction Of Technological Change On Renewable Or Non-Renewable Resource Exploitation: The Implication Of Bounded Efficiency Improvements

Birgit Friedl. Dynamic Resource Management In A Two-Sector Overlapping Generations Model With Increasing Harvest Costs

Session 6B: Environmental Taxation 1 (Chair: Shreekant Gupta)

Klaus Conrad. The Optimal Path Of Energy And Co2 Taxes For Intertemporal Resource Allocation And Improved Energy Efficiency

Laura Marsiliani, Thomas Renstrom, Cees Withagen. Environmental Policy And Interjurisdictional Competition In A Second Best World

Christoph Böhringer, Thomas Rutherford. In Search Of A Rationale For Differentiated Environmental Taxes

Herman Vollebergh. Climate Change Taxation In The Netherlands: An Evaluation

Lihchyi Wen. The Experience Of Upstream Combined Product Tax And Recycling Subsidy (UCTS) In Taiwan

Basharat A K Pitafi, James A Roumasset. Optimal Green Taxation With Both Emission And Commodity Taxes

Ragnar Arnason. Resource Rent Taxation: Is It Really Nondistortive?

Session 6C: Environmental Regulation 2 (Chair: Mark Cohen) Shunsuke Managi, James J Opaluch, Di Jin, Thomas A Grigalunas. Environmental Regulations And Technological Change in The Gulf Of Mexico Offshore Oil And Gas Industry: Rethinking The Porter Hypothesis

Catarina Roseta-Palma, Maria A Cunha-e-Sá, Ana Balcão-Reis. Endogenous Technological Change In Nonrenewable Resource Management

Pascal Da Costa. Semi-Endogenous Growth And Environmental Friendly Innovations

Masaru Yarime. Environmental Policy In The Presence Of Technological Uncertainty, Diversity, And Rigidity: The Case Of The Chlor-Alkali Industry In Japan And Western Europe

Dagmar Nelissen, Till Requate. The Impact Of Environmental Policy On The Direction Of Technological Change

- 37 -

Lionel Ragot, Mireille Chiroleu-Assouline, Katheline Schubert. Does Environmental Innovation Reduce Pollution ?

Paroma Sanyal. Powering A Green Progress: Environmental Research In The Absence Of Regulatory Oversight

Ariaster B Chimeli, John B Braden. Environmental Quality, Environmental Protection And Technology Adoption

Session 6D: Transition Economies (Chair: Randall Bluffstone) Elena E Shirkova, Edward Shirkov, Anatoliy S Avdeev, Alexey M Tokranov. Economic Efficiency Of Various Strategies Of Exploitation Of The Natural Resources Of Western Kamchatka And Its Shelf

Wojciech Suwala. Modeling Developent Of The Polish Coal Industry

Anil Markandya, Alexander Golub. On Environmental Regrets In Transition Economies

Elena Strukova. Efficiency And Sustainability In Natural Resources Sector Of Russia

Mark Brady. Stochastic Arable-Nitrogen Abatement From Heterogeneous Sources: Cost-Effective Coastal Load Reduction

Erik Mathijs, Luiza Toma. An Empirical Study Of Romanian Farmers' Environmental Perceptions Using Structural Equation Modelling With Latent Variables

, Marialuisa Tamborra, Anil Markandya. Improving Effectiveness Of Environmental Expenditure In A Transition Economy: The Case Of The Ukraine

Session 6E: Environmental Regulation 1 (Chair: Gloria Helfand) Laurent Franckx. Ambient Environmental Inspections In Repeated Enforcement Games

Carlos A Chavez, John K Stranlund. Enforcing Transferable Permit Systems In The Presence Of Transaction Costs

Lars Gårn Hansen, Frank Jensen, Urs Steiner Brandt, Niels Vestergaard. Illegal Landings And Discard: A Self Reporting Mechanism

Stef Proost, Sandra Rousseau. The Cost Effectiveness Of Environmental Policy Instruments In The Presence Of Imperfect Compliance

Karine Nyborg, Kjetil Telle. Environmental Regulation: Keeping Control With Lax Enforcement

Hua Wang, Nlandu Mamingi, Benoit Laplante, Susmita Dasgupta. Incomplete Enforcement Of Pollution Regulation

John K Stranlund, Carlos A Chavez, Christopher Costello. Deterring Non-Compliance In Dynamic Emissions Trading Programs: Does Allowing Permit Banking Call For A Different Enforcement Strategy?

Hirofumi Fukuyama, Moriki Hosoe. Illegal Dumping, Recycling And Monitoring

Session 6F: Experimental Economics And The Environment: Past, Present, And Future (Chair: John List) Session Panelists: William Schulze, Glenn Harrison, Robert Sugden.

Session 6G: Environmental Valuation 4 (Chair: Jon Strand) Nick Hanley, David Bell. Valuing The Benefits Of Coastal Water Quality Improvements Using Contingent And Real Behaviour

Ju-Chin Huang, P Joan Poor. To Control Or Not Control: Economic Valuation Of Beach Erosion Control Programs

Marco Grasso, Stefano Pareglio. Environmental Valuation In European Union Policy-Making

Michael Christie, Christopher D Azevedo. Valuing Preservation And Improvements Of Water Quality In Clear Lake: A Comparison Of The Choice Experiments And Contingent Valuation Methods

- 38 -

Young Chul Shin, Hong Jin Kim, Seunghun Joh. Estimating The Cost Of Air Pollution On Morbidity: An Analysis Of National Health Survey Data In South Korea

Jong Ho Hong, Yookyung Ko. The Health Effects Of Fine Particulates(PM2.5) : Evidence From Korea

Hiroaki Shirakawa, Shunji Matsuoka, Naoko Honda, Karen Ann. The Estimation Of Value Of Statistical Life In Asian Countries: Empirical Ressults From Kuala Lumpur And Hiroshima -

Jeremy Brown, Kimberly Rollins. A Framework For Valuing Non-Market Valuation Studies: An Institutional Approach

Session 6H: Environmental Valuation 5 (Chair: Richard Ready) Maria A Cunha-E-Sá, Maria M Ducla-Soares. A Dynamic Model Of Willingness To Pay For Health Improvements

Subhrendu K Pattanayak, Kerry Smith, George Van Houtven. Preference Calibration For Valuing Reductions In Mortality Risks

Stale Navrud, Dadi Kristofersson. Validity Tests Of Benefit Transfer: Are We Performing The Wrong Tests?

Ted Gayer. Motor-Vehicle Emission And Fuel-Economy Regulations And The Fatality Risks Of SUVS, Vans, And Pickups

Mary F Evans, Kerry Smith. The Health Impacts Of Air Pollution On The Elderly

Lauraine Chestnut, Jeffrey K Lazo, Robert Rowe, William Schulze. Economic Valuation Of Mortality Risk Reduction

Honda Naoko, Matsuoka Shunji, Shirakawa Hiroaki. Do Environmental Health Risks Have Higher VSL Than Traffic Accident Risk?

Anna Alberini, Maureen L Cropper, Alan Krupnick, Nathalie B Simon. Willingness To Pay For Future Risk: How Much Does Latency Matter?

Session 6I: Municipal Issues And Labelling Concerns (Chair: Julie Caswell) Thomas Bue Bjorner, Lars Gårn Hansen, Clifford S Russell. Environmental Labelling And Consumers' Choice: An Empirical Analysis Of The Effect Of The Nordic Swan

Steven Renzetti, Diane Dupont. The Relationship Between The Ownership And Performance Of Municipal Water Utilities

Peter Berck, Tim Beatty, Jeffrey T Lafrance, Anna Gueorguieva. Prices And Recycling

Heleen Bartelings, Rob Dellink, Ekko Van Ierland. Economic Incentives And The Quality Of Domestic Waste: Counterproductive Effects Through ‘Waste Leakage’

Gregory S Amacher, Erkki Koskela, Markku Ollikainen. Environmental Quality Competition And Ecolabeling

Bevin Ashenmiller. Welfare In A Bottle: Redistributional Implications Of Bottle Laws

Keith Brouhle. Information And The Provision Of Quality In A Duopoly

Randall Bluffstone, J R Deshazo. Upgrading Municipal Environmental Services To European Union Levels: A Case Study Of Household Willingness To Pay In Lithuania

Session S2: Steinbeck Forum 2 Tuesday, June 25th 2002 - 11:45 - 1:00 pm (Chair: Michael Hanemann) Daniel McFadden. How To Value Environmental Actions

EAERE Council Luncheon (by invitation only) Tuesday, June 25th 2002 - 1:00 pm - 2:15pm

- 39 -

ERE Editorial Board Luncheon (by invitation only) Tuesday, June 25th 2002 - 1:00 pm - 2:15pm Parallel Session 7 Tuesday, June 25th 2002 - 2:15 - 3:45 pm Session 7A: Preference For The Environment (Chair: V K Smith) Nicholas Flores. Beyond The Status Quo: Krutilla, Fisher, And Our Understanding Of Environmental Preferences

Stephen Polasky. Discussant

Alistair Munro. Discussant

Mary Evans. Rapporteur

Session 7B: Natural Resource Scarcity (Chair: Anthony Fisher) Karl-Gustaf Lofgren, Thomas Aronsson, Kenneth Backlund. Resource Scarcity, National Accounting And Growth

Y H Farzin. Discussant

John Hartwick. Discussant

Martin Smith. Rapporteur

Session 7C: Residuals Management (Chair: Michael Hanemann) Marca Weinberg, Stephen C Newbold. Residuals Management: Materials Balance And The Environmental Economics Literature

Rudiger Pethig. Discussant

Al McGartland. Discussant

Kurt Schwabe. Rapporteur

Session 7D: Air Pollution And Human Health (Chair: Richard T. Carson) Michael Greenstone. RFF And Lave And Seskin's Air Pollution And Human Health

C Arden Pope III. Discussant

Per Olav Johansson. Discussant

Christine Poulos. Rapporteur

Session 7E: Experimental Economics And The Environment 2 (Chair: Charles Mason) Christian Vossler, Gregory Poe, Kathleen Segerson, William Schulze. An Experimental Test Of The Segerson Mechanism (Discussant: Jeremy Clark)

Robert Sugden. Coping With Preference Anomalies In Cost-Benefit Analysis (Discussant: Charles Mason)

Kate Krause, Janie Chermak, David Brookshire. Water Consumption: Comparing Consumer Response In And Out Of The Lab (Discussant: Jayson Lusk)

Jeremy Clark, Lana Friesen, Andrew Muller. The Good, The Bad, And The Regulator: An Experimental Test Of The Two Conditional Audit Schemes (Discussant: Robert Sugden)

Parallel Session 08 Tuesday, June 25th 2002 - 4:00 - 6:00 pm Session 8A: Household Decision Making And Nonmarket Valuation (Chair: Laura Taylor) Vic Adamowicz, Donna Dosman. Combining Stated And Revealed Preference Data To Construct An Empirical Examination Of Intrahousehold Bargaining (Discussant: Mark Morrison)

Udo Ebert. Recovering Preferences In The Household Production Framework: The Case Of Averting Behavior (Discussant: Ju-Chin Huang)

Ian Bateman, Alistair Munro. Non-Cooperative Decision-Making And Measures Of Household Surplus (Discussant: Stale Navrud)

Mark Dickie, Flint Brent. Family Behavior And The Economic Value Of Parent And Child Health (Discussant: Craig Mohn)

Session 8B: Spatial Structure (Chair: Jonathan Kaplan)

- 40 -

Martin D Smith, James E Wilen. Economic Impacts Of Marine Reserves:The Importance Of Spatial Behavior (Discussant: Dan Holland)

Junjie Wu, Andrew Plantinga. Open Space Policies And Urban Spatial Structure (Discussant: Matthew Turner)

Maureen L Cropper, Antonio Bento, Ahmed Mushfiq Mobarak, Katja Vinha. The Impact Of Urban Spatial Structure On Travel Demand In The United States (Discussant: Kurt Bisang)

Session 8C: Water Quantity, Quality, Allocation And Valuation Issues (Chair: David Brookshire) Nick Hanley, Vic Adamowicz, Robert Wright. Do Choice Experiments Pass The Scope Test? A Test Of Scope In A Choice Experiment Examining The Benefits Water Quality Improvements (Discussant: Brett Day)

Philip Cooper, Gregory Poe, Ian Batemen. The Structure Of Motivation For Contingent Values: A Case Study Of Water Quality Improvement In A Lake With Amenity (Discussant: Philip Ganderton)

Gregory Poe, Philip Cooper, Ian Bateman, Stale Navrud, Rich Ready, Christian Vossler. Scope Sensitivity And Distance Decay Effects In Passive Values: Evidence From Experimental And Survey Studies (Discussant: John Loomis)

Philip Ganderton, David Brookshire, Mary Ewers, Joe Little. Western Water Market Prices And The Economic Value Of Water (Discussant: Bonnie Colby)

Session 8D: International Environmental Agreements (Chair: Klaus Conrad) Alistair Ulph, Santiago J Rubio. A Simple Dynamic Model Of International Environmental Agreements With A Stock Pollutant (Discussant: Gilles Rotillon)

Zhihao Yu, Larry Qiu. Multilateral Environmenal Agreements And Environmental Technology Transfer (Discussant: Scott Barrett)

Ing-Marie Gren, Henk Folmer. Cooperation Versus Non-Cooperation In Cleaning Of An International Water Body With Stochastic Environmental Damage: The Case Of The Baltic Sea (Discussant: Leo Simon)

Marchiori Carmen, Carraro Carlo. Endogenous Strategic Issue Linkage In International Negotiations (Discussant: Eftichios Sartzetakis)

Session 8E: Experimental Economics And The Environment 3 (Chair: Glenn Harrison) Catherine Kling, John List, Jinhua Zhao. Commitment Costs And The Basic Independence Assumption: Evidence From The Field

A C Burton, Katherine S Carson, Susan M Chilton, W G Hutchinson. Testing Estimation Methods On Experimental Referendum Data

John List, Charles Mason. Are CEOs Expected Utility Maximizers?

Jayson Lusk. Framing Effects And Procedural Invariance: Evidence From Incentive Compatible Auctions And Choice Experiments

Glenn Harrison, Morten Lau, Melonie Williams. Estimating Individual Discount Rates In Denmark

Jay Corrigan, Catherine Kling, Jinhua Zhao. The Dynamic Formation Of Willingness To Pay: An Empirical Specification And Test

Kate Krause, Janie Chermak, David Brookshire. The Demand For Water: Consumer Response To Scarcity

Session 8F: Environmental Taxation 2 (Chair: Winston Harrington) Diane Hite, Brent Sohngen, Josh Templeton. Property Tax Impacts On The Timing (Discussant: Bill Weber)

Helmut Cremer, Firouz Gahvari, Norbert Ladoux. Environmental Taxes With Heterogeneous Consumers: An Application To Energy Consumers In France (Discussant: Laura Castellucci)

Katrin Millock, Céline Nauges. Ex Post Evidence On Environmental Taxes: An Assessment Of The French

- 41 -

Tax On Air Pollution (Discussant: Annegrete Bruvoll)

Thomas P Lyon, John W Maxwell. Self-Regulation, Taxation And Public Voluntary Agreements (Discussant: Karl-Gustaf Lofgren)

Session 8G: Sustainable Development 2 (Chair: Talbot Page) Kirk Hamilton. Sustaining Per Capita Welfare (Discussant: Sara Aniyar)

Michael Harris, Iain Fraser. Natural Resource Accounting In Theory And Practice: A Critical Assessment (Discussant: Anni Huhtala)

Richard Woodward. Project Analysis Under Sustainability (Discussant: Zbigniew Bochniarz)

Ming Lei. Study On China's Sustainable Development-Integrated Input-Output Analysis And Green GDP Estimate For China (Discussant: Ji Zou)

Session 8H: Growth And Resource Availability (Chair: Charles Perrings) Susanna Lundström. Cycles Of Technology, Natural Resources And Economic Growth (Discussant: Pascal Da Costa)

Jean Philippe Stijns. Natural Resource Abundance And Human Capital Accumulation (Discussant: Ariaster Chimeli)

Francesco Ricci, Michel Moreaux. The Simple Analytics Of Developing Resources From Resources (Discussant: Geir Asheim)

Gavin Wright, Jesse Czelusta. Resource-Based Economic Growth, Past And Present (Discussant: Marzio Galeotti)

Session 8I: Technological Change And Energy (Chair: Pierre DuVair) Shunsuke Managi, James J Opaluch, Di Jin, Thomas A Grigalunas. Technological Change And Depletion In Offshore Oil And Gas (Discussant: Rob Hart)

Bertrand Magné, Michel Moreaux. Long Run Energy Trajectories : Assessing The Nuclear Option In Response To Global Warming (Discussant: Andreas Loeschel)

Peter Mulder, Henri De Groot. Trends In Energy Productivity. A Sectoral Cross-Country Analysis For The Period 1970-1997 (Discussant: Allen Blackman)

Herman Vollebergh, Per Fredrikkson, Elbert Dijkgraaf. Corruption And Energy Efficiency In OECD Countries: Theory And Evidence (Discussant: Murat Isik)

EAERE General Assembly (Los Angeles Room) Tuesday, June 25th 2002 - 6:05 - 7:15pm AERE Board Meeting (by invitation only) Tuesday, June 25th 2002 - 6:05 - 8:00pm Parallel Session 09 Wednesday, June 26th 2002 - 8:00 - 10:00 am Session 9A: Biodiversity 1 (Chair: Arthur Small) Oliver Deke. Conserving Biodiversity By Commercialization? A Model Framework For A Market For Genetic Resources (Discussant: Chad Settle)

Alexander Pfaff, Arturo Sanchez, Suzi Kerr. Deforestation Pressure And Biological Reserve Planning: A Conceptual Approach And An Illustrative Application For Costa Rica (Discussant: Oliver Deke)

Stephen Polasky, Christopher Costello. Dynamic Reserve Site Selection (Discussant: Arthur Small)

Session 9B: Consumer Choice (Chair: John Whitehead) J R Deshazo, Trudy Ann Cameron, Manrique Saen. A Test Of Choice Set Misspecification For Discrete Models Of Consumer Choice (Discussant: Tim Haab)

- 42 -

Klaus Moeltner, Jeffrey Englin. Choice Behavior Under Dynamic Quality Changes: State Dependence Versus 'Play-It-By-Ear' In Selecting Ski Resorts (Discussant: Peter Clinch)

Roger H Von Haefen, Daniel J Phaneuf, George R Parsons. Modeling Consumer Demand For A Large Set Of Quality Differentiated Goods: Estimation And Welfare Results From A Systems Approach (Discussant: Andrew Plantinga)

J R Deshazo, Manrique Saenz. Consumer Demand For Bundled Goods: A Practical Estimation Strategy (Discussant: Kentaro Yoshida)

Session 9C: Emission Permits (Chair: Dallas Burtraw) Frans P De Vries. Emission Permits And Diffusion Of Abatement Technology In A Differentiated Cournot Market (Discussant: Karine Nyborg)

Juan Pablo Montero, A Denny Ellerman. A Puzzle In SO2 Emissions Trading: Temporal Inefficiency Or Higher Prices? (Discussant: Marian Leimbach)

Andreas Lange. Intertemporal Decisions Under Uncertainty: Combining Expected Utility And Maximin (Discussant: Urs Brandt)

Bjorn Carlen. Exclusionary Manipulation Of Carbon Permit Markets: A Laboratory Test (Discussant: Carlos A Chavez)

Session 9D: Tax Effects (Chair: Shelby Gerking) Osmel Manzano. Tax Effects Upon Oil Field Development In Venezuela (Discussant: Tom Corringham)

Matthieu Glachant. The Political Economy Of Environmental Tax Design (Discussant: Cathrine Hagem)

Jörg Breitscheidel, Hans Gersbach. Taxes Or Subsidies In Self-Financing Environmental Mechanisms? (Discussant: Hilary Sigman)

Philippe Bontems, Bourgeon Jean-Marc. Technology Standard, Environmental Taxation And Pollution Monitoring (Discussant: Miguel Bunuel)

Session 9E: Double Dividend Reconsidered (Chair: Alan Randall) Talbot Page, Quinghua Zhang. Non-Distortionary Properties Of Environmental Taxes (Discussant: Roberton Williams)

William Jaeger. Setting Environmental Taxes In A Second-Best World (Discussant: V K Smith)

Eban Goodstein. Labor Supply And The Double Dividend (Discussant: James Roumasset)

Session 9F: Energy And Markets (Chair: Richard Morgenstern) Andrea Bigano, Stef Proost. The Opening Of The European Electricity Market And Environmental Policy: Does The Degree Of Competition Matter? (Discussant: Laurent Franckx)

Erin Taochi Mansur. Environmental Regulation In Oligopoly Markets: A Study Of Electricity Restructuring (Discussant: Spencer Banzhaf)

Karen Palmer, Timothy J Brennan, Salvador Martinez. Implementing Electricity Restructuring: Policies, Potholes And Prospects (Discussant: Stephen Holland)

Session 9G: Climate Change 5 (Chair: Maximilian Auffhammer) Barbara Buchner, Carlo Carraro, Igor Cersosimo, Carmen Marchiori. Back To Kyoto? U.S. Participation (Discussant: Zhong-Xiang Zhang)

Francesco Bosello, Barbara Buchner, Carlo Carraro, Davide Raggi. Can Equity Enhance Efficiency? Lessons From The Kyoto Protocol (Discussant: Parkash Chander)

Annegrete Bruvoll, Bodil Merethe Larsen. Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Do Carbon Taxes Work? (Discussant: William Wheeler)

- 43 -

Denise Van Regemorter, Johan Eyckmans, Vincent Van Steenberghe. Is Kyoto Fatally Flawed? An Analysis With MACGEM (Discussant: Brian Wright)

Session 9H: Modeling Risk And Uncertainty In Capture Fisheries (Chair: Rognvaldur Hannesson) (Session Discussants: Thomas Crocker, Diane Dupont. Closing Comments: James Sanchirico) Asgeir Daneilsson. Optimal Discarding Of Fish Under Risk

Robert Hicks, Ivar Strand. The Random Expected Utility Model: An Investigation Of Risk Properties

Daniel Holland. Balancing Biological And Financial Risks For The New England Groundfish Complex

Linwood Pendleton, Deqin Cai. Managing Risk In A Marine Fishery: Heterogeneous Response

Gautam Sethi, Christopher Costello, Anthony Fisher, Michael Hanemann. Fishery Management Under Multiple Uncertainty

Martin Smith, James Wilen. Correlated Risk Preferences And Behavior Of Commercial Fishermen: The Perfect Storm Dilemma

Session 9I: Water Pollution (Chair: Linda Fernandez) Shreekant Gupta, Shalini Saksena. Enforcement Of Pollution Control Laws And Firm Level Compliance: A Study Of Punjab, India (Discussant: Hirofumi Fukuyama)

D N Rao, Surender Kumar. Measuring Productive Efficiency Of Water Polluting Industries In India: A Distance Function Approach (Discussant: Seung-Hoon Yoo)

Phoebe Koundouri, Ben Groom, Céline Nauges, Alban Thomas. Irrigation Water Management Under Risk: An Application To Cyprus (Discussant: Jay Shimshack)

Helen Pushkarskaya, Alan Randall. Toward A Performance-Based Policy Instrument For Nonpoint Source Pollution Control: An Exercise In Mechanism Design (Discussant: Robert Hearne)

Parallel Session 10 Wednesday, June 26th 2002 - 10:15 - 11:45 am Session 10A: Biodiversity 2 (Chair: Stephen Polasky) Jon M Conrad, Paul J Ferraro. Habitat Conservation: The Dynamics Of Direct And Indirect Subsidies

Gioacchino Pappalardo, Giovanni Signorello. Farm Animal Biodiversity Conservation In Europe

Jyothis Sathyapalan. De Facto Access Right And People’s Preference To Conserve Biodiversity At Micro Level: A Study From India

Frank Wätzold, Martin Drechsler. Spatial Differentiation Of Compensation Payments For Biodiversity-Enhancing Land-Use Measures

Salvatore Di Falco, Charles Perrings. On The Impact Of Biodiversity On The Productivity Of Agroecosystems: A Theoretical And Empirical Investigation

Elizabeth J Z Robinson, Jeffrey C Williams. The Implications Of Cost Recovery For Regulatory Agencies: An Example From Ghana’s Wildlife Sector

Juha Siikamaki, David F Layton. Voluntary, Cost-Sharing Conservation Programs For Biodiversity Conservation: A Censored Random Coefficient Model Of Forest Owners' Willingness-To-Participate

Session 10B: Climate Change 6 (Chair: Anthony Fisher) Alejandro Caparros, Frederic Jacquemont. Carbon Sequestration And Biodiversity In Recent International Agreements

Grace Y Wong, Janaki R Alavalapati. The Cost Of Sequestering Carbon In Forests: A Computable General Equilibrium Analysis

- 44 -

Johanna Pohjola. How Sinks In Forest Products Affect The Cost Of Climate Convention And World Trade Of Forest Products: Results From A Global Economywide Model

James Manley, Klaus Moeltner, G C Van Kooten. How Costly Are Carbon Offsets? A Meta-Analysis Of Carbon Forest Sinks

Uwe A Schneider, Bruce A Mccarl. Competitive Economic Potential Of Greenhouse Gas Emission Mitigation In U.S. Agriculture And Forestry

Brian C Murray, Bruce A Mccarl, Heng-Chi Lee. Estimating Leakage From Forests

Brian C Murray, Brent L Sohngen, Bruce A McCarl. The Joint Effect Of Climate Change Impacts And Mitigation Incentives On The Rate Of Carbon Sequestration In Terrestrial Ecosystems

Session 10C: Environmental Policy Issues (Chair: David Chapman) Marian Leimbach. Equity And Emissions Trading: A Model Analysis

Scott Farrow. Using Risk Assessment, Benefit-Cost Analysis, And Real Options To Implement A Precautionary Principle

Gregory S Amacher, Arun S Malik. The Value Of Information Under Risk Of Fire: Implications For Government Budgeting And Policy Targeting

John List, Daniel M Sturm. Politics And Environmental Policy: Theory And Evidence From U.S. States

Silvia Secchi. Patient Behavior And Antibiotic Prescriptions: The Equilibrium Level Of Antibiotic Use And The Role Of A Market Permit System.

Wilma Rose Q Anton, Madhu Khanna, George Deltas. Environmental Management Systems: Do They Improve Environmental Performance?

Matthew A Turner, Quinn Weninger. Meetings With Costly Participation: An Empirical Investigation

Jhih-Shyang Shih, Michelle Bergin, Armistead G Russell, Alan Krupnick. Ozone And PM Air Pollution Control: An Integrated Approach

Session 10D: Sustainable Development 1 (Chair: John Hartwick) Cees Withagen, Geir B Asheim, Wolfgang Buchholz. On The Sustainable Program In Solow's Model

Hoon Park, Clifford S Russell, Junsoo Lee. National Culture And Environmental Sustainability: A Cross-National Analysis

Giuseppe Di Vita. Renewable Resources And Waste Recycling

John C Pezzey. A One-Sided Sustainability Test With Multiple Consumption Goods

John C Pezzey. Sustainability Policy And Environmental Policy

Reyer Gerlagh, Herman Vollebergh. Sustainability As Generosity

Session 10E: Environmental Valuation 6 (Chair: Carol Jones) Arthur J Caplan, Therese C Grijalva, Paul M Jakus. Waste Not Or Want Not: A Contingent Ranking Analysis Of Curbside Waste Disposal Options

Kentaro Yoshida. Benefit Transfer Of Choice Experiments For Valuing Negative And Positive Environmental Effects Of Agriculture

Carol Mansfield, Subhrendu K Pattanayak, William McDow, Robert Mcdonald. Shades Of Green: Measuring The Value Of Urban Forests In The Housing Market

Nada Wasi. Urban Quality Of Life Dynamics

Tijen Arin, Erin O Sills. Financing Conservation And Development With Tourism: Park Entrance Fees In The Republic Of Georgia

- 45 -

J Peter Clinch, J Andrew Kelly. Estimating The Price Elasticity Of Demand For Parking

Julie Brown, Susana Mourato. Measuring The Cost Of Congestion In Historic Properties: A Stated Preference Approach

Giles Atkinson, Susana Mourato, Brett Day. Electricity Pylons: “Amenity” Or “Eyesore”? Valuing Options To Replace Electricity Transmission Towers

Session 10F: Environmental Valuation 7 (Chair: Robert Sugden) Sudip Chattopadhyay. Welfare Measurement In The Discrete-Choice Random Utility Model Under General Preference Structure

Timothy C Haab, Kenneth E Mcconnell. A Note On Reconciling Welfare Measures In Contingent Valuation And Random Utility Models

Raymond B Palmquist. Weak Complementarity, Path Independence, And The Intuition Of The Willig Condition

David W Carter, J Walter Milon. A ‘Treatment Effects’ Approach To Welfare Estimation For Public Goods

John Horowitz. Does Existence Value = Reference Dependence?

Nicole Owens, Kelly Maguire, Nathalie Simon. Averting Behavior In Consumption: A Meta Analysis

Young Chul Shin, Alan Krupnick, Seunghun Joh. Estimating The Value Of Mortality Risk Reduction For Environmental Policy In South Korea: A Benefit Transfer Test

J R Deshazo, Linwood H Pendleton. An Activity-Differentiated Theory Of Consumption And Application To Non-Market Environmental Goods

Session 10G: Commons In Developing Countries (Chair: Edward Barbier)

Jill L Caviglia-Harris, Erin O Sills. Livelihood Strategies Of Traditional And Colonist Populations In The Brazilian Amazon Diversification And Deforestation

Vijay Intodia, Farida Shah. Greening The Rural Areas: An Economic Analysis Of The Community Forestry Programme

Douglas Southgate, Claudio Gonzalez-Vega, Jeffrey Hopkins. Rural Development, Poverty, And Natural Resources: Insights On Critical Linkages From El Salvador

Mette Termansen, Alberto Ansuategi. Economic Analysis Of Marine Reserve Creation: An Agent Based Simulation Model

M G Chandrakanth, Mahadev G Bhat. Institutions, Markets, And The Management Of Common Property Sacred Groves In India

Emi Y Uchida, Randall Kramer. Economic Benefits Of Coral Reefs To Small-Scale Fishers: A Case Study In North Sulawesi, Indonesia.

Camille Antinori, Gordon C Rausser. Ecological Effects Of Timber Contracting In Mexico’S Community Forestry Organizations

Session 10H: Pollution Control 3 (Chair: Wayne Gray) Mark A Cohen, Santhakumar. Information Disclosure As Environmental Regulation: A Theoretical Analysis

Randall Bluffstone, Darraratt Anantanasuwong. Using Economic Instruments To Address Non-Conventional Pollution Problems In Developing Countries: What To Do About Shrimp Aquaculture In Thailand?

Haynes C Goddard, Hale Thurston, Beth Lemberg, David Szlag. Tradable Credit Markets For Urban Stormwater Management

Daigee Shaw, Ming-Feng Hung. A Trading-Ratio System For Trading Water Pollution Discharge Permits

- 46 -

Laurent Franckx. Environmental Enforcement With Endogenous Ambient Monitoring

Miguel Buñuel. The Effect Of Emission Permits And Pigouvian Taxes On Market Structure

Hojeong Park. Uncertainty And Strategic Capital Adjustment Under Tradable Permit Programs

Laurent Gilotte. Can Negotiations On Burden Sharing Obtain Acceptable Emissions Quotas?

Session 10I: Renewable Resources And Water (Chair: Charles Howe) Jose Albiac, Javier Tapia, Anika Meyer, Javier Uche. Water Demand Alternatives To The Spanish National Hydrologic Plan

Diane Dupont, Steven Renzetti. Valuing The Indispensable In The Absence Of Markets: Shadow Prices For Water

R P S Malik. Groundwater-Energy Nexus: Implications For Environmental Sustainability Of Indian Agriculture

Marie Leigh Livingston, Alberto Garrido. Designing Groundwater Policy: Efficiency, Equity And International Case Studies

Mark Griffin Smith, Christopher D Bryan. Using Geographical Information Systems (GIS) To Evaluate The Potential Of Inter-Canal Reallocation Of Water To Increase Agricultural Production After Water Transfers

Stephen P Holland. Privatization Of Water Resource Development

J R Deshazo, Lea-Rachel Kosnik. Competition For Regulatory Influence In The U.S. Hydroelectric Relicensing Process

Ellen Hanak. Trading Upstream: Making California’s Water Market Work In The 1990s

Session S3: Steinbeck Forum 3 Wednesday, June 26th 2002 - 11:45 - 1:00 pm (Chair: Klaus Conrad) Martin Weitzman. Income And Sustainability

Parallel Session 11 Wednesday, June 26th 2002 - 2:15 - 4:15 pm Session 11A: Biodiversity 3 (Chair: Alexander Pfaff) Heidi J Albers, Jeffrey Muller. Enforcement, Payments, And Development Projects Near Protected Areas: How The Market Setting Determines What Works Where (Discussant: Christopher Costello)

Chad Settle, Jason F Shogren. Applying Hyperbolic Discounting To A Native-Exotic Species Conflict (Discussant: Elizabeth Robinson)

Anastasios Xepapadeas, W A Brock. Mosaic Management In Metapopulation Models: Optimal Management Of Interrelated Species In Patchy Environements (Discussant: Stephen Polasky)

Session 11B: Economics And Politics Of International Conflict And Cooperation On Natural And Environmental Resources (Chair: Ariel Dinar) Shlomi Dinar, Scott Barrett. A Typology Of Water Treaties

Ariel Dinar. Regimes Of Management Of Global And Transboundary Natural And Environmental Resources

Scott Barrett. International Cooperation On Infectious Diseases

Carlo Carraro. Equity, Flexibility And Institutions In Climate Change Negotiations: Theory And Experience

Gordon Munroe, Kathleen A Miller. Cooperation And Conflict In The Management Of Transboundary Fishery Resources

- 47 -

Michael Hoel. The Role Of Population Mobility In Conflict And Cooperation On International Natural And Environmental Resources

Session 11C: CGE Modeling (Chair: Zhong Xiang Zhang) Liwayway G Adkins, Richard F Garbaccio. The Effects Of The Proposed FTAA On Global Carbon Emissions: A General Equilibrium Analysis (Discussant: Brian Murray)

Raul O'Ryan, Sebastian Miller, Carlos J De Miguel. A CGE Framework To Evaluate Policy Options For Reducing Air Pollution Emissions In Chile (Discussant: Denise Van Regemorter)

Rob Dellink, Marjan Hofkes, Ekko Van Ierland, Harmen Verbruggen. Dynamic Modelling Of Pollution Abatement In A CGE Framework (Discussant: Jorg Breitscheidel)

Annegrete Bruvoll, Taran Faehn, Birger Strøm. Endogenous Climate Policy In A Rich Country: A CGE Study Of The Environmental Kuznets Curve. (Discussant: Anil Markandya)

Session 11D: Interdisciplinary Methods For Public Health Management In Developing Countries (Chair: Shanti Gamper Rabindran) (Session Discussants: Michael Hanemann, John Dixon) Robert Spear, Song Liang, Don Mazel. A Quantitative Framework For A Multigroup Model Of Schistosomiasis Transmission Dynamics And Control In Sichuan, China

Shanti Gamper Rabindran. The Role Of Large And Small Landholders During Indonesia's Land Fires: A GIS-Econometric Analysis Of Satellite, Land Use And Spatial Data

Dan Kammen, Majid Ezzati. Evaluating The Health Benefits Of Transitions In Household Energy Techonology In Kenya

Juerg Utzinger, Yesim Tozan, Burt Singer. Efficacy And Cost Effectiveness Of Environmental Management For Malaria Control

Session 11E: Biological And Bioprospecting Issues (Chair: Brian Wright) Ramanan Laxminarayan. Bacterial Resistance And The Optimal Use Of Antibiotics (Discussant: David Ervin)

Rüdiger Pethig. The Impact Of Scarcity And Abundance In Food Chains On Species Population Dynamics (Discussant: John Tschirhart)

Lucy O'Shea, Alistair Ulph. The Role Of Pest Resistance In Biotechnology R&D Investment Strategy (Discussant: Joshua Zivin)

Gordon C Rausser, Arthur A Small. Genetic Resource Libraries: Bioprospecting And Knowledge Assets (Discussant: Carolyn Fischer)

Session 11F: Valuation of Statistical Lives And Health Risks (Chair: Laurie Chestnut) Per-Olov Johansson. On The Definition And Age-Dependency Of The Value Of A Statistical Life (Discussant: Alistair Munro)

Subramaniam Madheswaran, K R Shanmugam. Valuations Of Life And Health Risks: Evidence From The Indian Labor Market (Discussant: Jong Hong)

Ikuho Kochi, Bryan Hubbell, Randall Kramer. An Empirical Bayes Approach To Combining And Comparing Estimates Of The Value Of A Statistical Life (Discussant: Carol Mansfield)

Xiao Zhang. Valuing Mortality Risk Reductions Using The Contingent Valuation Method: Evidence From A Survey Of Beijing Residents In 1999 (Discussant: Stefanos Nastis)

Session 11G: Fisheries 1 (Chair: Niels Vestergaard) Richard Newell, James Sanchirico, Suzi Kerr. Fishing Quota Markets (Discussant: Arnaud Reynaud)

John Kennedy. Scope For Efficient Multinational Exploitation Of North-East Atlantic Mackerel (Discussant: Sylvia Brandt)

- 48 -

Dale Squires, James Kirkley, Catherine J Morrison Paul. Capacity And Capacity Utilization In Common-Pool Resource Industries:Definition, Measurement, And A Comparison Of Approaches (Discussant: Rognvaldur Hannesson)

Session 11H: Technology Adoption 2 (Chair: Karen Palmer) Alan Collins, Richard D Harris. Does Plant Ownership Affect The Level Of Pollution Abatement Expenditure? (Discussant: Wilma Anton)

Karen Fisher-Vanden, Gary Jefferson, Hongmei Liu, Quan Tao. What Is Driving China's Decline In Energy Intensity? (Discussant: Ming Lei)

Nathaniel O Keohane. Environmental Policy And The Choice Of Abatement Technique: Evidence From Coal-Fired Power Plants (Discussant:John Braden)

Richard D Morgenstern, Mun S Ho, Jhih-Shyang Shih, Xuehua Zhang. The Near-Term Impacts Of Carbon Mitigation Policies On Manufacturing Industries (Discussant: Uwe Schneider)

Session 11I: Coordination (Chair: Christoph Boehringer) Urs Steiner Brandt. Unilateral Actions, The Case Of International Environmental Problems (Discussant: Alfred Endres)

Montse Viladrich-Grau, Nuria Oses. Co-Operation And Common Property Resource Use:Compliers Versus Defectors (Discussant: Joshua Duke)

Thomas P Lyon, John W Maxwell. Interest Group Lobbying And Corporate Strategy (Discussant: Daniel Sturm)

Leo Simon, Rachael Goodhue, Gordon C Rausser, Sylvie Morardet. Structure And Power In Multilateral Negotiations: An Application To French Water Policy (Discussant: Erin Mansur)

Parallel Session 12 Wednesday, June 26th 2002 - 4:30 - 6:00 pm

Session 12A: Biodiversity 4 (Chair: Arthur Small) Linda Fernandez. Migratory Species Management To Enhance Biodiversity In Several Countries

Richard Jensen. Economic Policy For Invasive Species

Stefan Baumgartner. Biodiversity As Insurance: The Case Of Agricultural Crop Variety

Stefan Baumgartner. Optimal Biodiversity Conservation In A Multi-Species Ecosystem With Interacting Species

Christopher Costello. Bioprospecting Reconsidered

Hilary Anderson, Brian Van Wilgen, Martin De Wit, Dave Le Maitre. A Cost-Benefit Analysis Of Biological Control Of Invasive Alien Plants: Case Studies From South Africa

Mahadev G Bhat. Exclusivity And Expropriation In Bioprospecting: Endogenous Rent Determination For Biodiversity Conservation

Sean B Cash. The Value Of Habitat Conservation For Bioprosecting

Session 12B: Environmental Valuation 8 (Chair: Carmelo Leon) Felix Schläpfer, Anna Roschewitz, Nick Hanley. A Comparison Of Individual Contingent Valuation Survey Response And Voting Behavior: Landscape Amenities Protection In Switzerland

Richard Ready, Willard Delavan, Donald Epp. A Comparison Of Revealed, Stated, And Actual Behavior In Response To A Change In Fishing Quality

Michael Bennett, Bill Provencher. Experience And Expectations: Exploring The Linkages Between Ex Ante And Retrospective Fishing Trip Valuations Using Combined Revealed And Stated Preference Data.

Riccardo Scarpa, Eric S K Ruto, Patti Kristjanson, Maren Radeny. Valuing Indigenous Cattle Breeds In

- 49 -

Kenya: An Empirical Comparison Of Stated And Revealed Preference Value Estimates

Jeffrey K Lazo, Donald M Waldman. Combining Stated Preference And Stated Preference: An Application In The Valuation Of Weather Forecasts

Koichi Kuriyama, Kenji Takeuchi, Atsuo Kishimoto, Kami Seo. A Choice Experiment Model For The Perception Of Environmental Risk: A Joint Estimation Using Stated Preference And Probability Data

Steven Stewart, Jim Kahn, Yuki Takatsuka. Choice Model And Contingent Valuation Estimates Of The Benefits Of Ecosystem Protection

Session 12C: Fuel Taxes (Chair: Kenneth Small) Charlotte Hagner. Gasoline Lead Content Reduction Policis: A Successful Case Of Environmental Policies In The European Union (EU)?

Shelby Gerking, Mitch Kunce, William Morgan. State Taxation, Exploration, And Production In The U.S. Oil Industry

Ida Ferrara. Automobile Quality Choice Under Pollution Control Regulation

Henrik Hammar, Åsa Löfgren, Thomas Sterner. Causality And The Political Economics Of Gasoline Taxation

Karl W Steininger. Environmentally Counterproductive Support Measures In Transport: A CGE Analysis For Austria

Akira Hibiki, Toshihide Arimura. Empirical Study On The Effect Of The Fuel Tax In Japan On The Vehicle Selection And The NOx Emission

Virginia D Mcconnell, Winston Harrington. Differential Fuel Taxes: Lessons Learned From The European Experience

James E Cochell, Thomas N Taylor, Peter M Schwarz. Industrial Customer Hourly Response To

Electricity Real-Time Pricing: Short Run And Long Run

Session 12D: China And Developing Countries (Chair: Richard Garbaccio) Karen Fisher-Vanden, Gary Jefferson. R&D And Energy Use In Chinese Industry

José Miguel Sánchez, Raúl O’Ryan. Comparing The Net Benefits Of Incentive Based And Command And Control Regulations In A Developing Context : The Case Of Santiago, Chile

Susan Dada Mungatana. Prospects For Enhancing Pollution Control In Developing Countries: The Case Of The Pan African Paper Mill In Kenya

Hua Wang, Yanhong Jin. Ownership And Industrial Pollution Control: Evidence From China

Yanhong Jin, Hua Wang, David Zilberman. Environmental Inspection, Community Complaints, And Industrial Pollution Abatement: Evidence From China

Maximilian Auffhammer. Predicting Regional Air Pollution: Forecasting With The EKC

Session 12E: Environmental Policy Issues (Chair: Bruce Peacock) Paul J Ferraro. Institutional Coordination In The Presence Of Joint Production And Spatial Heterogeneity

Paul Missios, Ida Ferrara. Life-Cycle Environmental Problems Of Consumer Products: An Economic Assessment Of Alternative Policies

William Jaeger, Van Kolpin. Economic Growth And Environmental Resource Allocation: Theoretical And Empirical Analysis

Dawn Cassandra Parker, Thomas Berger. Multi-Agent Modeling Of Interlinked Socioeconomic And Biophysical Proccesses At Multiple Spatial Scales

Carlisle Pemberton. Acquiring Information On The Environment For Economic Decision Making

- 50 -

Justus Wesseler. The Option Value Of Scientific Uncertainty On Pest-Resistance Development Of Transgenic Crops

Maura Flight, Sabrina Lovell. Linking Ecological Risk Assessment With Economic Valuation Methods: Pesticide Use And Birds

Session 12F: Water (Chair: Yacov Tsur) Peter Reinelt. Water Policy And The Political Economy Of Water Without Economists: Seventy Years Of Seawater Intrusion Into The Aquifers Of Monterey County

Jonathan D Kaplan, Robert C Johansson, Mark A Peters. Improving Water Quality Through Nutrient Management Planning: Industry And Environmental Effects

Javier Calatrava, Alberto Garrido. The Efficiency Of Spot Water Markets Under Uncertain Water Supply

Kurt Schwabe, Keith Knapp, Iddo Kan. Integrated Drain Water Management In The Central Valley

Chieko Umetsu. The Optimal Dynamic Model Of Conjunctive Water Use

Alexandra Dehnhardt. The Replacement Value Of Flood Plains As Nutrient Sinks: A Case Study Of The River Elbe

Keith C Knapp. Economics Of Groundwater Quality

Stephen Peck, Thomas J. Teisberg. A Long-term Permit Program for Long-term Climate Change Mitigation

Kamar Ali, Jerald J Fletcher, Tim T Phipps. Cost Effective Water Quality Management: A Watershed Perspective

Session 12G: Pollution Control 4 (Chair: Anastasios Xepapadeas) James Boyd. Financial Responsibility For Environmental Obligations: Are Bonding And Assurance Rules Fulfilling Their Promise?

Thomas Kuhn, James Cassing. The Political Economy Of Strategic Environmental Policy When Waste Products Are Tradable

Anna Alberini, Ignacio Correas. Liability For Environmental Cleanup: Is Less More? Evidence From Voluntary Cleanup Programs

Spencer Banzhaf, Randall Walsh. Testing For Environmental Gentrification: Migratory Responses To Changes In Air Quality In Los Angeles

Carol McAusland. Eco-Imperialism: Bad For The Environment?

Kent D Messer. Should Poachers Be Shot-On-Sight? Efficiency Versus Ethics

Robin R Jenkins, Kelly Maguire, Cynthia Morgan. Host Community Compensation And Municipal Solid Waste Landfills

Session 12H: Trade And The Environment 2 (Chair: Carlo Carraro) Meeta Keswani Mehra. Interaction Between Trade And Environment Policies With Special Interest Politics

Joseph Cooper, Mark Peters, Wesley Nimon, Robert House. Environmental Impacts Of A Free Trade Agreement Of The Americas

Elissaios Papyrakis, Lorenzo Pellegrini, Reyer Gerlagh. Effects Of Free Trade On Emissions Of A Global Pollutant

Giovanni Baiocchi. Towards Explaining The ``Pollution" Gap Between Rich And Poor Countries

Nazmiye Balta, Kieran Donaghy. Harmonization Of Environmental Policies Between The EU-15 And ‘New Accession’ Countries

Susana Ferreira. Deforestation, Property Rights And International Trade

Carol McAusland, Christopher Costello. Avoiding Invasives: Trade Related Policies For Preventing Introductions Of Exotic Species

- 51 -

Stephen Peck, Thomas J Teisberg. A Long-term Permit Program for Long-term Climate Change Mitigation.

Session 12I: Land Policies (Chair: Nancy E. Bockstael) Jon M Conrad, V Bosetti, E Messina. Ginostra: The Value Of Flexibility

Huda Abdelwahab Sharawi. Optimal Land-Use Allocation In The Blue Nile Flood Basin Of Central Sudan

Ronald L Trosper. Contingent Proprietorship: An American Indian Approach To Resilience

Samuel M Mwakubo, Gedion A Obare, Wilson K Yabann. The Influence Of Road Infrastructure On Soil Conservation, Resource Use And Farm Level Crop Production In The Semi-Arid Lands, Kenya: The Case Of Maize And Bean Production

Ram K Shrestha, Janaki R R Alavalapati. Valuing Environmental Benefits Of Agroforestry Using Attribute-Based Stated Preference Method

Charity K Kerapeletswe, Jon Lovett. Factors That Contribute To Participation In Common Property Resource Management: The Case Of Chobe Enclave And Ghanzi/Kgalagadi, Botswana

Wade Martin, Michele Haefele. A Logit Analysis Of The Public’s Objectives Or The Use Of Public Lands In The U.S.A.

Panel Discussions Wednesday, June 26th 2002 - 6:05 - 7:15 pm Session 13A: Uncertainty, Irreversibilities And Timing In Climate Regulation (Chair: Charles Kolstad) Session Panelists: Anthony Fisher, Alistair Ulph, Michael Hoel, Richard Howarth.

Session 13B: The Future Of Large Water Projects (Chair: Michael Hanemann)

Session Panelists: Juan Carlos Belausteguigoitia, John Dracup, Richard Howitt, Isha Ray.

Session 13C: Economic Research Needs For Environmental Policy (Chair: Matthew Clark, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) Session Panelists: Paul DeCivita, Bryan Hubbell, V Kerry Smith, Tom Crocker, Stale Navrud.

Session 13D: Implementation Of Economic Instruments In Latin America Short presentations by the board members of ALEAR (Latin American and Caribbean Association of Environmental and Resource Economists)

on “Using Economic Instruments in Latin America: A Few Practical Considerations” ,

"Determinants of Environmental Performance in the Brazilian Industrial Sector" ,

“Economic Instruments Used in the Hydro Plan of Mendoza Argentina”,

"Emissions Trading In Santiago: Why Has It Not Worked, But Been Succesful?",

"The Implementation of Water Discharge Charges in Colombia Problems and Achievements",

"The Chilean Experience on the Implementation of Water Utilization Rights Markets”

Session Panelists: Ronaldo Seroa da Motta, Armando Llop, Carlos Murillo, Sergio Ardila, Raul O´Ryan, Guillermo Donoso.

Session 13E: Environmental Economics at the World Bank: Applications, Limitations and Job Oppurtunities (Chair: John Dixon, World Bank) Session Panelists: Gayatri Acharya, Kirk Hamilton, Giovanni Ruta.

Session 13F: Future Research Directions In Environmental And Resource Economics (Chair: Richard T. Carson) Session Panelists: Ian Bateman (Environmental and Resource Economics), Joe Herriges (Journal of Environmental Economics and Management),

- 52 -

Charles Perrings (Environment and Development Economics).

Session 13G: Recent Developments In Choice Modelling (Chair: Jordan Louviere) Session Panelists: J R DeShazo, Susana Mourato, Douglass Shaw.

Session 13H: Recent Developments In Emissions Trading In Europe And The U.S. - Climate Change And Acidification (Chair: Frank Convery) Session Panelists: Ray Kopp, Dallas Burtraw, Carlos Carraro, Jean Charles Hourcade.

Parallel Session 14 Thursday, June 27th 2002 - 8:00 - 10:00 am Session 14A: The Economics Of Urban Sprawl And Land Use Change (Chair: Charles Kolstad) Renan-Ulrish Goetz, David Zilberman. The Economics Of Land Zoning: The Dynamic Approach (Discussant: Antonio Bento)

Antonio Bento, Sofia Franco. Market-Based Instruments To Control For Urban Sprawl (Discussant: David Zilberman )

Randall Walsh. Analyzing Open Space Policies In A Locational Equilibrium Model With Endogenous Provisions Of Privatelty Owned Open Space

Nancy Bockstael. Urban Sprawl As A Spatial Economic Process (Discussant: William Wheeler)

Session 14B: Air Pollution And Climate Change In Asia (Chair: Piyasena Abeygunawardena) Parkash Chander. The Kyoto Protocol And Developing Countries: Strategy And Equity Issues (Discussant: Richard Garbaccio)

Kakali Mukhopadhyay. An Empirical Study Of The Sources Of Air Pollution From Fossil Fuel

Combustion In India (Discussant: Richard Morgenstern)

Richard D Morgenstern, Alan Krupnick. The Effect Of So2 Control Policies On Co2 Emissions In The People's Republic Of China

Richard F Garbaccio, Mun S Ho, Dale W Jorgenson. The Health Effects Of Carbon Emissions Reductions In China (Discussant: David Dole)

Session 14C: Agriculture 2 (Chair: John Braden) Ramanan Laxminarayan, R David Simpson. Biological Limits On Agricultural Intensification: An Example From Resistance Management (Discussant: Kurt Schwabe)

Rolf Fare, Shawna Grosskopf, William L Weber. Shadow Prices And Pollution Costs In U.S. Agriculture (Discussant: Sean Cash)

Wolfram Schlenker, Anthony Fisher, Michael Hanemann. An Econometric Analysis Of Climate Change Impacts On U.S. Agriculture (Discussant: Riccardo Scarpa)

Krishna P Paudel, Luanne Lohr. Economics Of Agricultural Management Practices In Light Of Global Warming (Discussant: Mark Phillips)

Session 14D: Climate Change 7 (Chair: Stephen Beare) Marzio Galeotti, Efrem Castelnuovo, Gretel Gambarelli, Sergio Vergalli. Learning By Doing Versus Learning By Researching In A Model For Climate Change Policy Analysis (Discussant: Quinn Weninger)

Camilla Bretteville. Decision Criteria, Scientific Uncertainty, And The Global Warming Controversy (Discussant: Norimichi Matsueda)

Trudy Ann Cameron, Geoffrey R Gerdes. Measuring Subjective Expected Climate Change Mitigation Benefits (Discussant: Sandra Greiner)

- 53 -

Erin Baker. Uncertainty And Learning In A Strategic Environment: Global Climate Change (Discussant: Julie Hewitt)

Session 14E: Discounting (Chair: Chad Settle) Richard Newell, William Pizer. Discounting The Distant Future: How Much Do Uncertain Rates Increase Valuations? (Discussant: Megan Werner)

Alain Ayong Le Kama, Katheline Schubert. The Consequences Of An Endogenous Discounting Depending On Environmental Quality (Discussant: James Murphy)

Jae-Seung Lee. Subjective Benefits From Climate Change Mitigation: Intermediate Results From A Household Survey (Discussant: Ted Tomasi)

David F Layton, Richard Levine. How Much Does The Far Future Matter? A Hierarchical Bayesian Analysis Of The Public's Willingness To Mitigate Ecological Impacts Of Climate Change (Discussant: Thomas Holmes)

Session 14F: Tutorial Jordan Louviere. Experimental Design For Choice Experiments (2.0 Hours)

Session 14G: Exhaustible Resources (Chair: Jeff Krautkraemer) Ujjayant Chakravorty, Darrell Krulce, James A Roumasset. Exhaustible Resource Extraction Under Demand Heterogeneity (Discussant: Jean-Daniel Saphores)

Michael J Roberts. Can Portfolio Theory Explain Flat And Downward Natural Resource Price Trends? (Discussant: Richard Howitt)

Miguel Buñuel. Estimating The Effects Of Technology And Depletion On The Real Price Of Copper In The U.S. Using A Cointegration Approach (Discussant: Mary Riddel)

Carolyn Fischer, Ramanan Laxminarayan. Monopoly Extraction Of An Exhaustible Resource With Two Markets (Discussant: Ellen Burnes)

Session 14H: Pollution Control And Uncertainty (Chair: Till Requate) Tom Verbeke, Marc De Clercq. Environmental Policy, Policy Uncertainty And Relocation Decisions (Discussant: Nada Wasi)

Anastasios Xepapadeas, William Brock. Regulating Non-Linear Environmental Systems Under Knightian Uncertainty (Discussant: David Martin)

Bouwe Dijkstra, Daan Van Soest. Environmental Uncertainty And Irreversible Investments In Abatement Technology (Discussant: Zheng Zhang)

Yo Nagai. Optimal Standards Under Discretionary Enforcement (Discussant: Richard Howarth)

Session 14I: Forest 4 (Chair: Jerald Fletcher) Erkki Koskela, Luis Alvarez. Wicksellian Theory Of Forest Rotation Under Interest Rate Variability (Discussant: Aldo Cerda)

Markku Ollikainen, Erkki Koskela, Gregory S Amacher. Forest Rotations Under Interdependent Stands: Ownership Structure And Timing Of Decisions (Discussant: Alix Zwane)

Anne-Sophie Crépin. Management Models For Multi-Species Boreal Forests (Discussant: Angels Xabadia)

Chantal Line Carpentier, Tamara Gomes, Stephen A Vosti, Julie Witcover. Impacts Of Soil Quality Differences On Deforestation, Use Of Cleared Land, And Farm Income (Discussant: Camille Antinori)

Parallel Session 15 Thursday, June 27th 2002 - 10:15 - 11:45 am Session 15A: Spatial Modelling (Chair: Matthew Kahn) Konstantinos T Alexandridis, Bryan C Pijanowski. Multi Agent-Based Environmental Landscape

- 54 -

(Mabel) – An Artificial Intelligence Simulation Model: Some Early Assessments

Austin Troy, Jeff Romm. The Role Of Disclosure In The Flood Zone: Assessing The Price Effects Of The California Natural Hazard Disclosure Law (AB 1195)

Matthew A Turner, Henry G Overman, Diego Puga. Describing Urban Sprawl: Evidence From Remote Sensing Imagery

Kurt Bisang. Direct Democracy And Institutional Change Of Landscape Regimes. Empirical Evidence Of Changes From The 1970s To The 21st Century In Switzerland

Colin Vance, Rich Iovanna. Duration Modeling Of Land-Use Change In North Carolina: An Assessment Of Species Vulnerability To Habitat Loss

Session 15B: Sustainable Development 3 (Chair: Dirgha Tiwari) Tisha L N Emerson, Linwood H Pendleton. Income, Environmental Disamenity, And Toxic Releases

Daan Van Soest, John List, Tim Jeppesen. A Shadow Price Approach To Measuring The Costs Of Increased Environmental Stringency

Donna Theresa Ramirez, Madhu Khanna, David Zilberman. Conservation Capital And Sustainable Economic Growth

Yacov Tsur, Amos Zemel. Growth, Scarcity And R&D

Kathleen P Bell, Nancy E Bockstael, Michele Mcmahon. How Smart Are Smart Growth Policies?

Zbigniew Bochniarz, Sandra O Archibald. Evaluating Sustainability Of Economies In Transition: A Comparative Study

Marjan Hofkes, Reyer Gerlagh, W Lise, Harmen Verbruggen. Is Economic Growth Sustainable? A Trend Analysis For The Netherlands, 1990-1995

Session 15C: Pollution Control And Incentive Effects (Chair: Theodore Groves) Eftichios Sartzetakis, Effrosyni Diamantoudi. Stable International Environmental Agreements: An Analytical Approach

Santiago J Rubio. On The Coincidence Of The Feedback Nash Equilibrium And The Feedback Stackelberg Equilibrium In Differential Games Economic Applications

Greg Hunter. Endogenous Learning And The Option To Invest

Maria Khovanskaia. Incentive Contracts For Abatement Projects With Costly Self-Audit By The Agent

Minh Ha-Duong, David Keith. Climate Strategy With Co2 Capture From The Air

Kim Hang Pham Do, Henk Folmer. Strategies For International Environmental Cooperation

Maria Damon, Richard Carson, Leigh Johnson, Jamie Miller. Conceptual Issues in Transitioning from Copper Hull Coatings on Recreational Boats to Non-Toxic Alternatives

Session 15D: Fisheries 2 (Chair: Jim Sanchirico) R Jayaraman. Policy Options For Shark Resource Management In The Indian EEZ

Lisa Chapman, Stephen Beare. Managing With Imperfect Access Rights

Peder Andersen, Jon G Sutinen. Efficiency Of Cost-Recovery Mechanisms: The Fishery

Guillermo E Herrera. Implications Of Asymmetric Information And Uncertainty For The Economics Of Bycatch And Discarding

Anil Markandya, Pamela Mason. An Economic Analysis Of The Problem Of Sturgeon Depletion In The Caspian Sea

- 55 -

Niels Vestergaard, Dale Squires, Kristiaan Kerstens. Industry Capacity For A Common Pool Resource: The Danish Fishery

Christopher Costello, John K Stranlund. Non-Compliance In ITQ Fisheries

Session 15E: Environmental Valuation 9 (Chair: David Layton) Pei-Ing Wu, Ming-Ta Su. Design Of An Efficient And Complete Elicitation Decision Process In Contingent Valuation Method: Benefit Evaluation Of Kengting National Park In Taiwan

Dominika Dziegielewska, Robert Mendeloshn. Does “No” Mean “No”?Protest Responses And Contingent Valuation

Gregory L Poe, Kelly L Giraud, John B Loomis. A Simple Computational Method For Measuring The Difference Of Empirical Distributions: Application To External Scope Tests In Contingent Valuation

Megan Werner. The Effects Of Extreme Design Points On Dichotomous Choice Contingent Valuation Estimates

Peter Martinsson. Can Heaping Effects In Open-Ended Data Explain The Difference Between Estimated WTP In Open-Ended And Closed-Ended Contingent Valuation Surveys? An Application To Solid Waste Management In Sri Lanka

Julie Hewitt. Bias And Efficiency In The Iterative Paired Approach To Nonmarket Valuation

J R Deshazo, German Fermo. Designing Choice Sets For Stated Preference Methods: The Effects Of Complexity On Choice Consistency

Thomas P Holmes, Kevin J Boyle. Dynamic Anchoring And Distributed Lag Responses In A Binary Choice Experiment

Session 15F: Pollution Markets (Chair: John Livernois)

Gilles Rotillon, Pierre-André Jouvet, Philippe Michel. Capital Allocation And International Equilibrium With Pollution Permits

Harald Tauchmann. Co2 Abatement And Fuel Mix In German Electric Power Generation: What Are The Carbon Reduction Options Abandoned By The Ecological Tax Reform?

Norimichi Matsueda, Koichi Futagami, Akihisa Shibata. Environmental Transfers Against Global Warming: A Credit-Based Program

Matti Liski. Carbon Reduction Market

Matti Liski, Olli Tahvonen. Can Carbon Tax Eat OPEC's Rents?

Snorre Kverndokk, Antonio Gómez Gómez-Plana. Can Carbon Taxation Reduce Spanish Unemployment?

Spencer Banzhaf, Dallas Burtraw. Efficient Emission Fees In The U.S. Electricity Sector

Session 15G: Protecting California's Environment: A Session Covering Research Recently Funded By The Giannini Foundation (Chair: Anthony Fisher) Colin Carter, James Chalfant, Rachael E Goodhue. The Methyl Bromide Ban And The California Strawberry Industry

J Keith Gilless. Optimal Design Of Bio Reserves

Rachel E Goodhue, Karen Klonsky, Guillaume Gruere. Public Preferences, Pressure Groups And Public Policy Regarding Multifunctionality In Agriculture: Compatibility And Conflict

Y Hossein Farzin. The Role Of Information In The Management Of Nonpoint Source Pollution: The Case Of Sediment Control At Redwood National Park

David Newburn. The Wrath of Grapes: Spatial Estimation of Conservation Easeout Values in Sonoma County.

- 56 -

Session 15H: Environmental Valuation 10 (Chair: Nicholas Hanley) Mark Morrison. Does Revealing The Goal Of A Stated Preference Study Lead To Strategic Behavior?

Elisabetta Strazzera, Margarita Genius, Riccardo Scarpa, George Hutchinson. The Effect Of Protest Votes On The Estimates Of WTP For Use Values Of Recreational Sites

Juergen Meyerhoff. The Influence Of General And Specific Attitudes On Stated Willingness To Pay: A Composite Attitude-Behaviour Model

James J Murphy, Darryl Weatherhead, Thomas J Stevens. Controlling For Hypothetical Bias In Contingent Valuation Studies

Thomas C Brown, Icek Ajzen. Further Tests Of Entreaties To Avoid Hypothetical Bias In Referendum Contingent Valuation

Steven Stewart, Alok Bohara, David S Brookshire, Phil Ganderton. Lab And Field Studies Of Experience And Subject Pool Effects In Contingent Valuation

Session 15I: Water And Development 1 (Chair: Haynes Goddard)

Fahim Uddin. Rural Water Supply And Environmental Sanitation Project In U.P. Hills (India): A Model For South Asia

Mohamed Salah Matoussi, Saida Slama. Modeling A Centralized Water Resources Allocation In A World Of Water Scarcity And Incomplete Information

Bishwanath Goldar, Nandini Banerjee. Informal Regulation And Water Quality In Rivers In India

Purnamita Dasgupta. Benefits Of Safe Water For The Urban Poor In Delhi, India: Alternative Valuation Measures

Monica Scatasta. Integrated Water Resources Management In Brazil: An Economic-Hydrologic-Institutional Analysis Of The Paraíba Do Sul River Basin

Nicola King. Valuing A City’s Water: The Tshwane Case Study

M G Chandrakanth, B Shivakumaraswamy, KM Sathisha, G Basavaraj. Negative Externality Due To Cumulative Interference Of Irrigation Wells In Groundwater Irrigation In Hard Rock Areas Of Peninsular India

Session S4: Steinbeck Forum 4 Thursday, June 27th 2002 - 11:45 - 1:00 pm (Chair: Richard T. Carson) Kenneth Arrow. Paradoxes Of Sustainability: Theoretical And Empirical

Parallel Session 16 Thursday, June 27th 2002 - 2:15 - 4:15 pm Session 16A: Dealing With Transport Externalities In A Second Best World 1 (Chair: Stef Proost) Antonio Bento, Sarmila Mallik. Controlling Vehicle Air Pollution In Developing Countries: The Critical Significance Of The Irregular Transportation Sector

Bruno de Borger, Inge Mayeres. Externalities, Discrete Choices And Optimal Taxation Of Cars: Empirical Results Based On A Numerical Optimisation Model

Winston Harrington, David Mason, Peter Nelson, Elena Safirova. Distributional Consequences Of Road Pricing Policies On A Network Representing A Real City

Ian W H Parry, Kenneth A Small. On Optimal Fares For Public Transport

Session 16B: Climate Change (Chair: Alfred Endres) Lawrence H Goulder, A Lans Bovenberg. Addressing Industry-Distributional Concerns In U.S. Climate-Change Policy (Discussant: Santiago Rubio)

- 57 -

Christoph Böhringer. Rio -10 Years After: A Critical Appraisal Of Climate Policy (Discussant: Barbara Buchner)

Denise Van Regemorter, Proost Stef. Interaction Between Local Air Pollution And Global Warming And Its Policy Implications For Belgium (Discussant: Roberton Williams)

Sandra Greiner. Sharing The Climate Policy Burden In The EU (Discussant: James Manley)

Session 16C: Hedonic Models 2 (Chair: Ray Palmquist) Christine Poulos, V Kerry Smith. Measuring The Disamenity Impacts Of Interstate Highways (Discussant: Randall Rosenberger)

John B Loomis, Vicki Rameker, Andy Seidl. A Public Hedonic Model Of Public Market Transactions For Open Space Protection And Implicit Prices Of Open Space Attributes (Discussant: Diane Hite)

Laura Taylor, Keith Ihlanfeldt. Assessing The Impacts Of Environmental Contamination On Commercial And Industrial Properties (Discussant: Jim Chalfant)

René Van Der Kruk. Impacts Of Wetland Amenities On The Dutch Housing Market (Discussant: Matt Massey)

Session 16D: Side Effects Of Pollution Control (Chair: Eban Goodstein) Mireille Chiroleu-Assouline, Mouez Fodha. Double Dividend Hypothesis, Golden Rule And Welfare Distribution (Discussant: Eban Goodstein)

Robert D Mohr, Don Fullerton. Suggested Subsidies Are Sub-Optimal Unless Combined With An Output Tax (Discussant: Spencer Banzhaf)

Tomislav Vukina, Pierre Dubois, Philippe Bontems. Optimal Regulation Of Private Production Contracts With Environmental Externalities (Discussant: Eirik Romstad)

Francois Cochard, Marc Willinger, Anastasios Xepapadeas. Efficiency Of Nonpoint Source Pollution

Instruments In The Presence Of Endogenous Externality Among Polluters: An Experimental Approach (Discussant: Helen Pushkarskaya)

Session 16E: Population: An Essential Component Of Environmental And Resource Economics (Chair: David Zilberman)

Partha Dasgupta. Population And The Environment

Mark R Rosenzweig. Population And The Environment: The Case Of Forests

Warren Sanderson. World Population Growth and Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Michael Dalton, Larry Goulder, Paul Ehrlich, Don Kennedy, Steve Schneider. Population Policy And The Clean Development Mechanism.

Session 16F: Fisheries 3 (Chair: Ivar Strand) Quinn Weninger, James R Waters. Economic Benefits Of Management Reform In The Northern Gulf Of Mexico Reef Fish Fishery (Discussant: Peder Andersen)

Gardner Brown, Brett Berger, Moses Ikiara. Lake Victoria Fisheries: Policy Conflicts Created By Predator-Prey Relations (Discussant: James Roumasset)

Victor Kasulo, Charles Perrings. Fishing Down The Value Chain: Modelling The Impact Of Biodiversity Loss In Freshwater Fisheries: The Case Of Malawi. (Discussant: Guillermo Herrera)

Basil M H Sharp, Chris J Batstone. Rights Based Fishing: Evidence From The New Zealand Rock Lobster Fishery (Discussant: Christopher Dumas)

Session 16G: Emerging Issues (Chair: Rudiger Pethig)

Juan Belausteguigoitia. Giwa Causal Chain Analysis Methodology (Discussant: Richard Howitt)

Chuan-Zhong Li, Karl-Gustaf Löfgren. On The Choice Of Metrics In Dynamic Welfare Analysis:

- 58 -

Utility Versus Money Measures (Discussant: Nicholas Flores)

Katheline Schubert, Henin Pierre-Yves. How Long Can Excess Pollution Persist? The Noncooperative Case (Discussant: Ted Groves)

Session 16H: Resource Management (Chair: John Kennedy) Anastasios Xepapadeas, Aart De Zeeuw, Karl-Göran Mäler. Feedback Equilibria For A Class Of Non-Linear Differential Games In Resource Economics (Discussant: Minh Duong)

Eric Naevdal, Michael Margolis. Optimal Resource Management With A Safe Minimum Standard: Conditions For Living On The Edge Of Risk (Discussant: Gerard Gaudet)

Markku Ollikainen, Jussi Lankoski. Relative Effectiveness Of Alternative Income Support Measures In Promoting Multifunctional Agriculture (Discussant: Scott Steele)

Daniel Fuentes Castro, Gilles Rotillon, Pierre Alain Jayet. Managing A Common Renewable Resource In Asymmetric Information (Discussant: Francesco Ricci)

Session 16I: Ecolabelling (Chair: Bruce Larson) Mads Greaker. Eco-Labels, Production Related Externalities And Trade (Discussant: Krishna Paudel)

Sangeeta Bansal, Shubhashis Gangopadhyay. Presence Of Environmentally Aware Consumers: Bat Is Bad (Discussant: Patrizia Riganti)

Charles F Mason. On The Economics Of Eco-Labeling (Discussant: David Brookshire)

Christopher D Clark. Deriving An Optimal Environmental Certification Standard With A Spatial Product Differentiation Model (Discussant: Heleen Bartelings)

Parallel Session 17 Thursday, June 27th 2002 - 4:30 - 6:00 pm Session 17A: Dealing With Transport Externalities In A Second Best World 2 (Chair: Stef Proost) Kurt van Dender. Transport Taxes With Multiple Trip Purposes

Rob Williams, Sarah West. Empirical Estimates For Environmental Policy Making In A Second-Best Setting

E Calthrop, B De Borger, Stef Proost. Externality Taxes In The Transport Sector In A Distorted Economy

Session 17B: Classical Issues (Chair: Cees Withagen) Stefanie Kirchhoff, Thomas Berger. Heterogeneity And Policy Response In Multiple-Player Games: A Model Applied To Common-Pool Resource Management In Ghana

Urvashi Narain, Anthony Fisher, Michael Hanemann. The Irreversibility Effect: Necessary Versus Sufficient Conditions

Klaus Rennings, Thomas Zwick. Employment Impact Of Cleaner Production On The Firm Level: Empirical Evidence From A Survey In Five European Countries

John C Pezzey. Measuring Technical Progress In Gross And Net Products

John M Hartwick. Energy Consumption And Capital In Classical Mechanics

Session 17C: Environmental Valuation 11 (Chair: Maria Cunha-e-Sa) Sudip Chattopadhyay. A Repeated Sampling Experiment In Assessing The Validity Of Benefit Transfer In Valuing Non-Market Goods

- 59 -

Randall S Rosenberger, Tim T Phipps. Site Correspondence Effects In Benefit Transfers: A Meta-Analysis Transfer Function

Mark Morrison, Jeff W Bennett. Developing A Meta-Analytic Benefit Transfer Model

Randall A Bluffstone, Rafat Fazeli. What Is The Value Of The San Timoteo Canyon? A Contingent Valuation Study

Session 17D: Pollution Regulation 5 (Chair: Eric Dada) John Horowitz, Sushenjit Bandyopadhyay. Randomness In Point-Source Water Pollution: Evidence And Implications

Abay Mulatu, Raymond Florax, Cees Withagen. Environmental Regulation And Competitiveness: A Meta Analysis Of International Studies

Sonja Teelucksingh, Charles Perrings. Environmental Variables And The Gordon-Schaefer Model: A Case Study Of The Shrimp Fishery Of The Gulf Of Paria, Trinidad

Mark Brady. The Cost-Efficiency Of Swedish Arable-Nitrogen Abatement Policy

Robert C Johansson, Mark A Peters, Jonathan D Kaplan, Roger Claassen. Agri-Environmental Efficiency: Potentials And Pitfalls For EQIP In The 2002 Farm Bill

Shirra Freeman, Naomi Zeitouni. Optimal Development With Stochastic Environmental Impacts

Session 17E: Water And Development 2 (Chair: Juan Belausteguigoitia) M N Murty, Surender Kumar. Environmental And Economic Accounting, And The Shadow Prices Of Natural Resources: Some Conceptual Issues And A Case Study Of Industrial Water Pollution In India

Jon Strand, Ian Walker. Water Markets And Demand In Central America: Results Based On Household Sample Surveys From 17 Cities

Nkhangweleni Mavis Museisi, Dale Whittington. Willingness To Pay For Water In Rural South Africa: A Case Study Of Kutama / Sinthumule In The Northern Province

Annegret Steinmetz. Informal Groundwater Markets: The Role Of Share Contracts

S K Pattanayak, Dale Whittington, J C Yang, Bal Kumar Kc. Do Households Want Privatized Municipal Water Services? Evidence From Nepal

Mursaleena Islam, John B Braden. Floodplain Resource Management: An Economic Analysis Of Agriculture And Fisheries Production In Bangladesh

Dominic Moran, Petrina Rowcroft. Pipe Dreams: Investigating The Demand Responsive Approach To Water And Sanitation Provision In The Developing World

Session 17F: Fostering Work In Developing Countries Through Regional Networks (Chair: Jeffrey Vincent) Panelists: Thomas Sterner, Hermi Francisco, Katalin Zaim, Leiner Vargas.

Session 17G: Wetlands (Chair: Randall Kramer) Abdellatif Khattabi, Mohammed Benslimane. Determining User-Fees To Sustain Recreation Activities In A Wetland

John P Hoehn, Michael D Kaplowitz, Frank Lupi. The Role Of Valuation In Cap And Trade Systems For Ecosystem Resources: An Analysis Of Wetlands Mitigation And Banking

Chung-Ki Lee, Seung-Jun Kwak, Seung-Hoon Yoo. Valuing The Woopo Wetland In Korea: Application Of The Contingent Valuation Method

Randall Kramer, Jonathan Eisen-Hecht, Christopher Liese, Evan Mercer. The Influence Of Program Design Attributes On Wetland Restoration Choices

- 60 -

Tracy Boyer. Wetland Restoration Site Selection Under Wetland Mitigation Banking In Minnesota: A Spatial Economic Analysis Of Alternative Regulatory Objectives

Eric Huszar, Thomas P Holmes, John Bergstrom, Susan Kask. Testing A Computer Assisted Valuation Panel Approach For Valuing Watershed Ecosystem Restoration

Session 17H: Health Effects (Chair: Daigee Shaw) Thomas D Crocker, David W Archer, Jason F Shogren. Environmental Hazards And Child Care

Sujitra Vassanadumrongdee, Shunji Matsuoka. A Meta-Analysis Of Short-Term Morbidity Contingent Valuation Studies

Charles W Griffiths, Nathalie B Simon, Tracey Woodruff. Air Pollution And Asthma:The Effects Of Short-Term Exposure On Asthma Medication Use

Stefanos A Nastis. Neighborhood Effects On Children's Health: A Collective Framework With Household Production

Stefanos A Nastis. The Power Of Place

Carol Mansfield, Tim Wilcosky. The Cost Of Asthma: Cost-Of-Illness Estimates Of Acute Asthma Episodes

Session 17I: Risk (Chair: David Zilberman) Olivier Mahul. Coping With Catastrophic Risk: The Role Of (Non-)Participating Contracts

W Douglass Shaw, Mary Riddel. Episodic Emissions And Nuclear Waste Transport:

Michael K Bowen, Wilson K Yabann, H K Maritim. Risk, Attitude Towards Risk And Soil Conservation In The Semi-Arid Lands Of Kenya

Olivier Mahul, Brian D Wright. On The Propensity For Self-Insurance Under Threat Of Failure: An Application To The Optimal Size Of Refuge For Transgenic Crops

Daniel Rondeau , Jonathan Buttle. Option Values At The Margin: Assessing The Desirability Of Expanding A Protected Area

I N D E X O F P A R T I C I P A N T S

- 61 -

Camille Antinori: 10G, 14I Piyasena Abeygunawardena: 14B (University of California, Berkeley) (Asian Development Bank)

John Antle: 1F, 5B, 3C Gayatri Acharya: 13E (Montana State University) (Yale University)

Wilma Rose Q Anton: 10C, 11H Vic Adamowicz: 1G, 1G, 8A, 8C (University of Central Florida) (University of Alberta)

Sergio Ardila: 13D Marcos Adamson: 4E (InterAmerican Development Bank) (Universidad de Costa Rica)

Toshihide Arimura: 4I Bhim Adhikari: 5D (Sophia University) (University of York)

Tijen Arin: 10E Liwayway G Adkins: 11C (World Bank) (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency)

Ragnar Arnason: 6B Rimjhim Aggarwal: 1F, 5D (University of Iceland) (University of Maryland)

Kenneth Arrow: 4S Mary Ahearn: 4F (Stanford University) (Economic Research Service)

Michael Ash: 3E Anna Alberini: 12G, 2B, 3F, 6H (University of Massachusetts, Amherst) (University of Maryland)

Geir B Asheim: 10D, 4B, 8H Heidi J Albers: 11A, 2C, 3C (Stanford University) (Resources for the Future)

Bevin Ashenmiller: 5C, 6I Jose Albiac: 10I (University of California, Santa Barbara) (Unidad Economia Agraria)

Giles Atkinson: 10E Konstantinos T Alexandridis: 15A (London School of Economics) (Michigan State University)

Maximilian Auffhammer: 12D, 9G Kamar Ali: 12F (University of California, San Diego) (West Virginia University)

Giovanni Baiocchi: 12H Bobur Alimov: 2C, 4C (University of York) (University of Connecticut)

Erin Baker: 14D Savas Alpay: 2F (Stanford University) (Bilkent University)

Baishali Bakshi: 2D, 3I Francisco Alpizar: 2F (University of California, Irvine) (Gothenburg University)

Nazmiye Balta: 12H Gregory S Amacher: 10C, 14I, 1C, 5I, 6I (University of Illinois) (Virginia Tech University)

Sushenjit Bandyopadhyay: 17D, 5A Peder Andersen: 15D, 16F, 1E (University of Maryland) (Danish Economic Council)

Sangeeta Bansal: 16I Hilary Anderson: 12A, 4E (Indian Statistical Institute) (CSIR- Environmentek)

Spencer Banzhaf: 12G, 15F, 16D, 9F Arild Angelsen: 1B (Resources for the Future) (Chr. Michelsen Institute)

Edward B Barbier: 10G, 3E Sara Aniyar: 4B, 8G (University of Wyoming) (Beijer Institute)

Scott Barrett: 11B, 11B, 8D Alberto Ansuategi: 10G (Johns Hopkins University) (University of the Basque Country)

- 62 -

Zbigniew Bochniarz: 15B, 8G Fabio Granja E Barros: 4D (University of Minnesota) (University of Brasília)

Nancy Bockstael: 12I, 14A Heleen Bartelings: 16I, 6I (University of Maryland) (Wageningen University)

Andreas Boecker: 1H Sérgio A Batalhone: 4I (University of Giessen) (University of Brasília)

Christoph Böhringer: 11I, 16B, 1A, 6B Ian Bateman: 8A, 13F (Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW)) (University of East Anglia)

Mattias Boman: 1D, 4B Stefan Baumgartner: 12A, 12A, 3G (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences) (University of California, Berkeley)

Philippe Bontems: 16D, 4H, 4H, 9D Stephen Beare: 14D, 15D, 4A, 5D (INRA, France) (ABARE, Australia)

Francesco Bosello: 9G Randy Becker: 3F (Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei) (U.S. Bureau of the Census)

Alain Bousquet: 4D Juan Carlos Belausteguigoitia: 16G, 17E, 13B (CICT, France) (Global International Waters Assessment)

Michael K Bowen: 17I Kathleen P Bell: 15B (Moi University) (University of Maine)

Peter Boxall: 1G Michael Bennett: 12B (University of Alberta) (University of Wisconsin, Madison)

James Boyd: 12G Antonio Bento: 14A, 14A, 16A, 8B (Resources for the Future) (University of California, Santa Barbara)

Tracy Boyer: 17G, 1C Peter Berck: 3E, 6I (University of Minnesota) (University of California, Berkeley)

John Braden: 14C, 11H Thomas Berger: 12E, 17B, 3D (University of Illinois) (Bonn University)

Mark Brady: 17D, 6D Eli Berman: 3F (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences) (Boston University)

Sylvia Brandt: 11G, 6A Mahadev G Bhat: 10G, 12A (University of Massachusetts, Amherst) (Florida International University)

Urs Steiner Brandt: 11I, 6E, 9C Madhusudan Bhattarai: 2C (University of Southern Denmark) (International Water Management Institute)

Jörg Breitscheidel: 11C, 9D Ram Chandra Bhattarai: 5C (University of Heidelberg) (Tribhuvan University)

Camilla Bretteville: 14D, 2A Andrea Bigano: 9F (University of Oslo) (Catholic University Leuven)

David Brookshire: 16I, 7E, 8C, 8C, 8E Kurt Bisang: 15A, 8B (University of New Mexico) (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology)

David S Brookshire: 15H, 2B Thomas Bue Bjorner: 6I (US Geological Survey) (AKF, Denmark)

Keith Brouhle: 6I Allen Blackman: 5E, 8I (University of Illinois) (Resources for the Future)

Gardner Brown: 16F Randall A Bluffstone: 10H, 17C, 6D, 6I (University of Washington) (University of Redlands)

- 63 -

Chantal Line Carpentier: 14I, 2C, 3C Jeremy Brown: 6G (North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation)

(University of Guelph)

Julie Brown: 10E (Imperial College) Carlo Carraro: 11B, 12H, 3A, 9G, 9G, 13H

(University of Venice) Thomas C Brown: 1G, 15H (U.S. Forest Service) Katherine Carson: 5F

(U.S. Air Force Academy) Nick Brozovic: 15G (University of California, Berkeley) Richard T. Carson: 13F, 15C, 4S, 5F, 7D

(University of California, San Diego) Annegrete Bruvoll: 11C, 5C, 8F, 9G (Statistics Norway) Colin Carter: 15G

(University of California, Davis) Barbara Buchner: 16B, 3A, 9G, 9G (Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei) David W Carter: 10F

(University of Central Florida) Miguel Buñuel: 10H, 14G, 9D (Fundación Biodiversidad) Sean B Cash: 14C, 12A, 1H

(University of California, Berkeley) Ellen Burnes: 14G, 2D (California State University, Fresno) Laura Castellucci: 8F

(University of Rome) A C Burton: 5F, 8E (United States Air Force Academy) Federico Castillo: 4E

(University of California, Berkeley) Dallas Burtraw: 15F, 1A, 9C, 13H (Resources for the Future) Daniel Fuentes Castro: 16H

(Université de Paris X) Amy Buss-Gautam: 4F (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) Julie Caswell: 4H, 6I

(University of Massachusetts, Amherst) Jonathan Buttle: 17I (University of Victoria) Andrea Cattaneo: 3C, 4C

(Economic Research Service, USDA) Brita Bye: 4A (Ragnar Frisch Centre for Economic Research) Jill L Caviglia-Harris: 10G, 5D

(Salisbury University) Javier Calatrava: 12F (Technical University of Cartagena, Spain) Aldo Cerda Molina: 14I, 1C, 3I

(Universidad de Chile) E Calthrop: 17A (Catholic Unviversity of Leuven) Rabindra Nath Chakraborty: 1I, 3D

(University of St. Gallen) Trudy Ann Cameron: 14D, 5H, 9B (University of Oregon) Ujjayant Chakravorty: 14G

(Emory University) Alejandro Caparros: 10B (CIRED, France) Jim Chalfant: 16C

(University of California, Davis) Arthur J Caplan: 10E (Utah State University) Parkash Chander: 14B, 9G

(Indian Statistical Institute) Bjorn Carlen: 9C (Stockholm University and MIT) M G Chandrakanth: 10G, 15I

(University of Agricultural Science) Marchiori Carmen: 8D (Fondazione Eni E. Mattei) David Chapman: 10C, 1G

(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) Alain Carpentier: 1H, 1H (INRA, France) Lisa Chapman: 15D

(ABARE, Australia)

- 64 -

Frank Convery: 13H Sudip Chattopadhyay: 10F, 17C (University College Dublin) (San Francisco State University)

Joseph Cooper: 12H, 2I, 5E Carlos A Chavez: 6E, 6E, 9C (Economic Research Service, USDA) (Universidad de Concepcion)

Philip Cooper: 8C, 8C Janie Chermak: 5H, 7E, 8E (University of East Anglia) (University of New Mexico)

Ignacio Correas: 12G Wen Chern: 2H, 3E (University of Colorado) (Ohio State University)

Jay Corrigan: 8E Laurie Chestnut: 11F, 6H (Iowa State University) (Stratus Consulting)

Tom Corringham: 9D Susan Chilton: 5F, 5F (University of California, San Diego) (University of Newcastle)

Christopher Costello: 11A, 12A, 12H, 15D, 3E, 5H, 6E, 9A, 9H

Ariaster B Chimeli: 3D, 6C, 8H (Columbia University)

(University of California, Santa Barbara) Mireille Chiroleu-Assouline: 16D, 1I, 6C (University Paris 1) Helmut Cremer: 8F

(University of Toulouse) Michael Christie: 6G (University of Wales Aberystwyth) Anne-Sophie Crépin: 14I

(Beijer Institute) Christopher D Clark: 16I (Mitchell College of Business) Thomas D Crocker: 17H, 2F, 9H, 13C, 16G

(University of Wyoming) Jeremy Clark: 7E, 7E (University of Canterbury) Maureen L Cropper: 6H, 8B

(University of Maryland) Matthew Clark: 13C (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) Maria Cunha-e-Sa: 17C, 6H

(Universidade Nova de Lisboa) Peter Clinch: 10E, 9B (University College Dublin) W Bowman Cutter: 3E

(University of California, Los Angeles) Francois Cochard: 16D (Université Louis Pasteur) Jesse Czelusta: 3D, 8H

(Stanford University) James E Cochell: 12C (Duke Energy) Pascal Da Costa: 6A, 6C, 8H

(ERASME - EUREQua, France) Benedicte Coestier: 5I (INRA, France) Ronaldo Seroa Da Motta: 4C, 13D

(Instituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada) Mario Cogoy: 1I (University of Trieste) Eric Dada: 17D

(GTZ-Kenia) Mark Cohen: 10H, 6C (Vanderbilt University) Maria Damon: 15C

(University of California, San Diego) Bonnie Colby: 4I, 8C (University of Arizona) Asgeir Daneilsson: 9H

(National Economic Institute) Alan Collins: 11H (University of Portsmouth) Ralph D'Arge: 2A

(Law and Economics Consulting Group) Jon M Conrad: 10A, 12I (Cornell University) Michael Dalton: 16E

(California State University Monetery Bay) Klaus Conrad: 3S, 6B, 8D (Mannheim University)

- 65 -

David Dole: 14B, 2G Partha Dasgupta: 16E, 1S (Asian Development Bank) (Harvard University)

Guillermo Donoso: 13d Purnamita Dasgupta: 15I (Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile) (Institute of Economic Growth, India)

John Dracup: 13B Brett Day: 10E, 8C (University of California, Davis) (University of East Anglia)

John Duffield: 1G, 3B, 3B Bruno de Borger: 16A (University of Montana) (Catholic University of Leuven)

Joshua Duke: 11I Stephane De Cara: 2A, 3A (University of Delaware) (Iowa State University)

Christopher Dumas: 16F Frans P De Vries: 9C (University of North Carolina, Wilmington) (University of Groningen)

Minh Duong: 16H Paul deCivita: 13C (CNRS & Carnegie Mellon University) (Office of Policy and Programme Services, Canada)

Diane Dupont: 10I, 6I, 9H Alexandra Dehnhardt: 12F (Brock University) (Institute for Ecological Economy Research)

Pierre DuVair: 8I Oliver Deke: 9A, 9A (California Energy Commission) (Kiel Institute of World Economics)

Dominika Dziegielewska: 15E Rob Dellink: 11C, 6I (Yale University) (Wageningen University)

Udo Ebert: 8A Marian S delos Angeles: 3C (University of Oldenburg) (International Centre for Research in Agroforestry,

Kenya) Essi Eerola: 5G (University of Helsinki) J R Deshazo: 10F, 10I, 15E, 3E, 5H, 6I, 9B, 9B, 13G

(University of California, Los Angeles) Jonathan Eisen-Hecht: 17G (Nicholas School of the Environment) Salvatore Di Falco: 10A

(University of York) Tisha L N Emerson: 15B (University of Southern California) Giuseppe Di Vita: 10D

(University of Catania) Alfred Endres: 11I, 16B (University of Hagen) Mark Dickie: 8A

(University of Central Florida) Jeffrey Englin: 2B, 9B (University of Nevada) Frank Dietz: 4F

(Ministry of the Environment, Netherlands) Eric English: 5D (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) Bouwe Dijkstra: 14H

(University of Nottingham) Clas Eriksson: 3D (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences) Ariel Dinar: 11B, 11B

(World Bank) Lire Ersado: 5I (International Food Policy Research Institute) Shlomi Dinar: 11B

(Johns Hopkins University) David Ervin: 11E (Portland State University) John Dixon: 13E, 11D

(World Bank) Mary F Evans: 6H, 7A (North Carolina State University) Kim Hang Pham Do: 15C

(Tilburg University) Mary Ewers: 5A, 8C (University of New Mexico)

- 66 -

Shirra Freeman: 17D Majid Ezzati: 11D (University of Haifa) (Resources for the Future)

Birgit Friedl: 6A Taran Faehn: 11C, 3A (University of Klagenfurt) (Statistics Norway)

Peter Frykblom: 1H, 3H Rolf Fare: 14C (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences) (Southeast Missouri State University)

Hirofumi Fukuyama: 6E, 9I Scott Farrow: 10C (Kyushu University) (U.S. General Accounting Office)

Marzio Galeotti: 14D, 4D, 8H Hossein Farzin: 15G, 3E, 7B (Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei) (University of California, Davis)

Shanti Gamper Rabindran: 11D, 1B Hongli Feng: 1F (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) (Iowa State University)

Philip Ganderton: 2B, 8C, 8C Linda Fernandez: 12A, 5D, 6A, 9I (University of New Mexico) (University of California, Riverside)

Richard F Garbaccio: 11C, 12D, 14B, 14B Ida Ferrara: 12C, 12E (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) (York University)

Alberto Garrido: 10I, 12F, 5G Paul J Ferraro: 10A, 12E (Universidad Politecnica de Madrid) (Georgia State University)

Gerard Gaudet: 16H Susana Ferreira: 12H, 4B, 3D. (University of Montreal) (University of California, San Diego)

Ted Gayer: 2B, 6H David Finnoff: 1E (Tufts University) (University of Wyoming)

Daniel Gbetnkom: 4C Carolyn Fischer: 11E, 14G, 1E, 2F (University of Yaounde II) (Resources for the Future)

Shelby Gerking: 12C, 9D Anthony Fisher: 10B, 14C, 15G, 17B, 7B, 9H, 13A (University of Central Florida) (University of California, Berkeley)

Reyer Gerlagh: 10D, 12H, 15B, 5G Monica Fisher: 1B (Vrije Universiteit) (Purdue University)

Konstantinos Giannakas: 4F Karen Fisher-Vanden: 11H, 12D (University of Nebraska) (Dartmouth College)

Laurent Gilotte: 10H Jerald Fletcher: 14I, 5H (Ecole Nationale Des Ponts Et Chaussees) (West Virginia University)

Matthieu Glachant: 9D Maura Flight: 12E (CERNA, France) (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency)

Haynes C Goddard: 10H, 15I Nicholas Flores: 16G, 3B, 4B, 7A (University of Cincinnati) (University of Colorado)

Renan-Ulrish Goetz: 14A Henk Folmer: 15C, 1A, 8D (University of Girona) (Wageningen University)

Elise Golan: 1H, 4H Tamara Fox: 16E (Economic Research Service, USDA) (Hewlett Foundation)

Bishwanath Goldar: 15I Laurent Franckx: 10H, 6E, 9F (Institute of Economic Growth, India) (Ecole Royale Militaire)

Alexander Golub: 3D, 6D Sofia Franco: 14A (Environmental Defense Fund) (University of California, Santa Barbara)

- 67 -

Timothy C Haab: 10F, 2B, 2E, 2E, 9B Alan Dale Gonzales: 2G (Ohio State University) (COGEN)

Minh Ha-Duong: 15C Matías González: 4E (Carnegie Mellon University) (Universidad de Las Palmas)

Cathrine Hagem: 1F, 2F, 9D Armando Gonzalez-Caban: 1G (University of Oslo) (U.S. Forest Service)

Charlotte Hagner: 12C Rachel E Goodhue: 15G (Institute of Coastal Research, Germany) (University of California, Davis)

Kirsten Halsnæs: 4A Eban Goodstein: 16D, 16D, 9E (UNEP Collaborating Centre on Energy and Environment)

(Lewis and Clark College)

Lawrence H Goulder: 16B (Stanford University) Kirk Hamilton: 8G, 13E

(World Bank) Estelle Gozlan: 3H, 5I (INRA, France) Stephen F Hamilton: 5G

(University of Central Florida) Joshua Graff Zivin: 3H (Columbia University) Henrik Hammar: 12C

(Goteborg University) Marco Grasso: 6G (Università Milano Bicocca) Ellen Hanak: 10I

(Public Policy Institute of California) Wayne Gray: 10H, 3F (Clark University) Michael Hanemann: 13B, 14C, 17B, 2E, 2S, 7C, 9H,

11D (University of California, Berkeley) Mads Greaker: 16I (University of Oslo) Nicholas Hanley: 12B, 15H, 6G, 8C

(University of Glasgow) Michael Greenstone: 7D (University of Chicago) Rögnvaldur Hannesson: 11G, 1E, 9H

(Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration) Sandra Greiner: 14D, 16B

(Hamburg Institute of International Economics) Lars Gårn Hansen: 2H, 6E, 6I Ing-Marie Gren: 8D (AKF, Denmark) (Beijer Institute) Winston Harrington: 12C, 16A, 8F Charles W Griffiths: 17H (Resources for the Future) (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) Michael Harris: 8G Rolf Groeneveld: 1D, 3I (La Trobe University) (Wageningen University) Glenn W Harrison: 3B, 5F, 5F, 8E, 8E Shawna Grosskopf: 14C, 5H (University of South Carolina) (Oregon State University) Rob Hart: 5E, 8I Theodore Groves: 15C, 16G (Cambridge University) (University of California, San Diego) John M Hartwick: 10D, 17B, 7B Guillaume Gruere: 15G (Queen's University) (University of California, Davis) Geoffrey Heal: 16G Herath Gunatileka: 2G (Columbia University) (University of Peradeniya) Anna Heaney: 4A U A D P Gunawardena: 2C (ABARE, Australia) (University of Sri Jayewardenapura) Robert Hearne: 4E, 9I Shreekant Gupta: 4D, 6B, 9I (North Dakota State University) (Delhi School of Economics)

- 68 -

Richard Howarth: 14H, 3G, 13A Gloria Helfand: 6E (Dartmouth College) (University of Michigan)

Charles W Howe: 10I, 5A Carsten Helm: 1A (University of Colorado, Boulder) (Humboldt University of Berlin)

Richard E Howitt: 14G, 16G, 2D, 13B Guillermo E Herrera: 15D, 16F (University of California, Davis) (Bowdoin College)

Ju-Chin Huang: 6G, 8A Joe Herriges: 13F (University of New Hampshire) (Iowa State University)

Bryan Hubbell: 11F, 13C Peter Hess: 4I (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) (University of California, Berkeley)

Anne-Juliane Huennemeyer: 1C Julie Hewitt: 14D, 15E, 5C (University of Alberta) (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency)

Anni Huhtala: 4B, 4B, 8G Akira Hibiki: 12C (MTT Economic Research) (National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan)

Greg Hunter: 15C Robert Hicks: 9H (Tilburg University) (College of William and Mary)

Dan Huppert: 1D, 5A Diane Hite: 16C, 4I, 8F (University of Washington) (Mississippi State University)

Eric Huszar: 17G John P Hoehn: 17G (USDA Forest Service) (Michigan State University)

Emma Hutchinson: 5I Michael Hoel: 11B, 5G, 13A (University of Michigan) (University of Oslo)

Margaret Insley: 2C Sandra Hoffmann: 1H, 2H (University of Waterloo) (Resources for the Future)

Vijay Intodia: 10G Marjan Hofkes: 11C, 15B (Indian Institute of Management) (Vrije Universiteit)

Iovanna Richard: 1E, John Tschirhart Daniel Holland: 8B, 9H (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) (University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth)

Murat Isik: 4F, 5E, 8I Stephen P Holland: 10I, 9F (Iowa State University) (University of California, Energy Institute)

Mursaleena Islam: 17E Thomas P Holmes: 14E, 15E, 17G, 2B (Econ One Research) (U.S. Forest Service)

William Jaeger: 12E, 9E Naoko Honda: 6G (Oregon State University) (Hiroshima University)

R Jayaraman: 15D Jong Ho Hong: 11F, 6G (Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University)

(Hanyang University)

Nico Hoogervorst: 4F (Ministry of the Environment) Robin R Jenkins: 12G

(U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) John Horowitz: 10F, 17D (University of Maryland) Richard Jensen: 12A

(University of Notre Dame) Moriki Hosoe: 3E, 6E (Kyushu University) Karen M Jetter: 2I

(University of California) Jean-Charles Hourcade: 2A, 13H (CIRED, France)

- 69 -

Catherine Kling: 2I, 5F, 5F, 8E, 8E, 5B Yanhong Jin: 12D (Iowa State University) (University of California, Berkeley)

Keith C Knapp: 12F, 12F, 1C, 2D, 2D Anne Borge Johannesen: 1D (University of California, Riverside) (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)

Ikuho Kochi: 11F Per-Olov Johansson: 11F, 7D (Duke University) (Stockholm School of Economics)

Charles Kolstad: 13A, 14A, 1S Robert C Johansson: 12F, 17D (University of California, Santa Barbara) (Economic Research Service, USDA)

Raymond Kopp: 3D, 13H Carol Jones: 10E (Resources for the Future) (Economic Research Service, USDA)

Erkki Koskela: 14I, 14I, 6I Matthew E Kahn: 15A, 3F, 4D (University of Helsinki) (Tufts University)

Lea-Rachel Kosnik: 10I David Kaimowitz: 1B (Political Economy Research Center) (Center for International Forestry Research)

Phoebe Koundouri: 9I Aloyce R M Kaliba: 4F (University of Reading and University College London)

(University of Arkansas, Pine Bluff)

Iddo Kan: 12F (University of California, Riverside) Randall Kramer: 10G, 11F, 17G, 17G

(Duke University) Jonathan D Kaplan: 12F, 17D, 4F, 8B (Economic Research Service, USDA) Signe Krarup: 5I

(AKF, Denmark) Victor Kasulo: 16F (National Economic Council, Malawi) Kate Krause: 7E, 8E

(University of New Mexico) Claudia Kemfert: 3A (Oldenburg University) Jeff Krautkraemer: 14G

(Washington State University) John Kennedy: 11G, 16H (La Trobe University) Alan Krupnick: 10C, 10F, 14B, 6H

(Resources for the Future) Nathaniel O Keohane: 11H, 1F, 2D (Yale University) Thomas Kuhn: 12G

(Technical University of Chemnitz) Charity K Kerapeletswe: 12I (University of York) Surender Kumar: 17E, 5E, 9I

(University of Illinois) Suzi Kerr: 11G, 5B, 9A (Motu, New Zealand) Koichi Kuriyama: 12B

(Waseda University) Madhu Khanna: 10C, 15B (University of Illinois) Lyubov Kurkalova: 2I

(Iowa State University) Abdellatif Khattabi: 17G (Ecole Nationale Forestiere d'Ingenieurs) Snorre Kverndokk: 15F, 4A

(Ragnar Frisch Centre for Economic Research) Maria Khovanskaia: 15C (Regional Environmental Center for CEE, Hungary) Seung-Jun Kwak: 17G

(Korea University) Nicola King: 15I (CSIR, South Africa) Norbert Ladoux: 8F

(IDEI, France) Stefanie Kirchhoff: 17B (University of Bonn) Debahatra Lahiri: 2I

(Rural Development Centre, India) Paul Kivi: 3H (University of Wyoming)

- 70 -

Matti Liski: 15F, 15F Andreas Lange: 9C (MIT) (Centre for European Economic Research)

John List: 5F, 6F, 8E, 8E, 10C, 15B Christian Langpap: 1D (Oregon State University) (University of Maryland)

Deshun Liu: 2G Alessandro Lanza: 4D (Tsinghua University) (Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei)

John Livernois: 10C, 15B, 5F, 6F, 8E, 8E, 15F, 6A Bruce Larson: 16I, 5G (University of Guelph) (University of Connecticut)

Marie Leigh Livingston: 10I Douglas M Larson: 2E, 2E, 4E (University of Northern Colorado) (University of California, Davis)

Armando Llop: 13D Marita Laukkanen: 2F (National Institute of Water, Argentina) (University of California, Berkeley)

Andreas Loeschel: 8I Ramanan Laxminarayan: 11E, 14C, 14G (Centre for European Economic Research) (Resources for the Future)

Karl-Gustaf Löfgren: 16G, 1C, 7B, 8F David F Layton: 10A, 14E, 15E, 2E (Umea University) (University of Washington)

Alberto Longo: 2B, 5I Jeffrey K Lazo: 12B, 5H, 6H (Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei) (Stratus Consulting)

John B Loomis: 15E, 16C, 1G, 8C Alain Ayong Le Kama: 14E (Colorado State University) (EUREQua, France)

Andreas Löschel: 8I, 3A Jae-Seung Lee: 14E (Centre for European Economic Research) (University of California, Los Angeles)

Jordan Louviere: 13G, 14F Christopher Leggett: 3B, 5C (University of Technology) (Industrial Economics)

Susanna Lundström: 8H Ming Lei: 11H, 8G (Göteborg University) (Beijing University)

Jayson Lusk: 7E, 8E Marian Leimbach: 10C, 9C (Mississippi State University) (Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research)

Thomas P Lyon: 11I, 8F Carmelo León: 12B, 3B (Indiana University) (University of Las Palmas)

Subramaniam Madheswaran: 11F Roberto Leon-Gonzalez: 3B (Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics) (University of York)

Bertrand Magné: 8I Arik Levinson: 3F (University of Toulouse) (Georgetown University)

Kelly Maguire: 12G, 17C, 5C, 10F Daniel K Lew: 2E, 2E (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) (University of California, Davis)

Olivier Mahul: 17I, 17I Chuan-Zhong Li: 16G (INRA, France) (University of Dalarna)

R P S Malik: 10I Song Liang: 11D (University of Delhi) (University of California, Berkeley)

Ville Malkonen: 1C Eric Lichtenberg: 1F, 2I, 3I (University of California, Berkeley) (University of Maryland)

Shunsuke Managi: 6C, 8I Valentina Lira: 1C, 3I (University of Rhode Island) (EcoNATIVA, Chile)

- 71 -

Virginia D Mcconnell: 12C James Manley: 10B, 16B (Resources for the Future) (University of Nevada, Reno)

Daniel McFadden: 2S Carol Mansfield: 10E, 11F, 17H, 2I (University of California, Berkeley) (Research Triangle Institute)

Al McGartland: 7C Erin Taochi Mansur: 11I, 9F (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) (University of California, Berkeley)

Ross Mckitrick: 4D Osmel Manzano: 9D (University of Guelph) (CAF, Venezuela)

Norman Meade: 5I Carmen Marchiori: 1A, 9G (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) (Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei)

Meeta Keswani Mehra: 12H, 5G Michael Margolis: 16H, 4H, 4H (Indian Statistical Institute) (Resources for the Future)

Kent D Messer: 12G, 5F Anil Markandya: 11C, 15D, 4D, 6D, 6D (Cornell University) (World Bank)

Philip Meyer: 1G Laura Marsiliani: 6B (Meyer Resources) (University of Rochester)

Juergen Meyerhoff: 15H David Martin: 14H (Technical University Berlin) (Davidson College)

Katrin Millock: 2H, 3H, 4H, 8F Wade Martin: 12I (CIRED, France) (California State University, Long Beach)

Smita Misra: 5H Peter Martinsson: 15E (World Bank) (Goteborg University)

Paul Missios: 12E Charles F Mason: 16I, 7E, 7E, 8E (Ryerson University) (University of Wyoming)

Klaus Moeltner: 10B, 9B Pamela J Mason: 2C (University of Nevada, Reno) (Simon Fraser University)

Craig Mohn: 2E, 8A Matt Massey: 16C (University of California, Berkeley) (US Environmental Protection Agency)

Robert D Mohr: 16D, 4F, 5E William A Masters: 4A (University of New Hampshire) (Purdue University)

Amyaz A Moledina: 5H Erik Mathijs: 6D (Bates College) (Catholic University of Leuven)

Juan Pablo Montero: 9C Mohamed Salah Matoussi: 15I (MIT) (University of Tunis)

Dominic Moran: 17E, 1C Norimichi Matsueda: 14D, 15F (Scottish Agricultural College) (Kwansei Gakuin University)

Sylvie Morardet: 11I Shunji Matsuoka: 17H, 6G (CEMAGREF, France) (Hiroshima University)

Michel Moreaux: 8H, 8I Inge Mayeres: 16A (CICT, France) (Catholic University Leuven)

Richard D Morgenstern: 11H, 14B, 14B, 9F Carol McAusland: 12G, 12H, 3E (Resources for the Future) (University of California, Santa Barbara)

Mark Morrison: 15H, 17C, 8A Jill McCluskey: 2H, 2H (Georgia State University) (Washington State University)

- 72 -

Stale Navrud: 6H, 8A, 13C Ulf Moslener: 2A, 2F, 3A (Agricultural University of Norway) (Universität Heidelberg)

Dagmar Nelissen: 6C Estelle Motte: 4E (University of Kiel) (North Dakota State University)

Andries Nentjes: 1A, 2A Susana Mourato: 10E, 10E, 3B, 13G (University of Groningen) (Imperial College)

David Newburn: 15G Kakali Mukhopadhyay: 14B (University of California, Berkeley) (Indian Institute of Management)

Richard Newell: 11G, 14E, 4F Abay Mulatu: 17D (Resources for the Future) (Free University Amsterdam)

Joelle Noailly: 1I Peter Mulder: 5E, 8I (Vrije Universiteit) (Vrije Universiteit)

Richard B Norgaard: 3G, 3G, 1I Susan Dada Mungatana: 12D (University of California, Berkeley) (Moi University)

Paulo Ald Nunes: 3B, 4E Alistair Munro: 11F, 7A, 8A (Free University Amsterdam) (University of East Anglia)

Karine Nyborg: 5C, 6E, 9C Gordon Munroe: 11B (Ragnar Frisch Centre for Economic Research) (University of British Columbia)

Wallace Oates: 3E Carlos Murillo: 13D (University of Maryland) (Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica)

Markku Ollikainen: 14I, 16H, 6I James J Murphy: 14E, 15H (University of Helsinki) (University of Massachusetts, Amherst)

Jim Opaluch: 5E Brian C Murray: 10B, 10B, 11C (University of Rhode Island) (Research Triangle Institute)

Raul O'Ryan: 11C, 1F, 13D Greg Murtough: 4A (Universidad de Chile) (Productivity Commission, Australia)

Lucy O'Shea: 11E M N Murty: 17E (University of Reading) (Institute of Economic Growth, India)

Talbot Page: 3D, 8G, 9E, 16G Nkhangweleni Mavis Museisi: 17E (Brown University) (University of Venda for Science and Technology)

Cheryl Palm: 3C Samuel M Mwakubo: 12I (Tropical Soil Biology and Fertility Program) (Moi University)

Karen Palmer: 11H, 1A, 5C, 9F Eric Naevdal: 16H (Resources for the Future) (Agricultural University of Norway)

Raymond B Palmquist: 10F, 16C Yo Nagai: 14H (North Carolina State University) (University of Michigan)

Michael Papenfus: 4I Honda Naoko: 6H (University of Wisconsin) (Hiroshima Univers)

Gioacchino Pappalardo: 10A Urvashi Narain: 17B, 4D, 5D (University of Catania) (Resources for the Future)

Elissaios Papyrakis: 12H Stefanos A Nastis: 11F, 17H, 17H (Vrije Universiteit) (University of Wyoming)

Phares Parayno: 2G Céline Nauges: 5A, 8F, 9I (Asian Institute of Management) (INRA, France)

- 73 -

Frank Place: 3C Hojeong Park: 10H (International Food Policy Research Institute) (University of Maryland)

Andrew Plantinga: 5B, 8B, 9B Hoon Park: 10D (Oregon State University) (University of Central Florida)

Gregory L Poe: 4I, 15E, 5F, 5F, 7E, 8C, 8C Dawn Cassandra Parker: 12E (Cornell University) (Indiana University)

Johanna Pohjola: 10B Peter J. Parks: 6A (Finnish Forest Research Institute) (Rutgers University)

Stephen Polasky: 10A, 11A, 5H, 7A, 9A Ian W H Parry: 16A (University of Minnesota) (Resources for the Future)

C Arden Pope III: 7D Carl Pasurka: 5H (Brigham Young University) (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency)

Christine Poulos: 16C, 7D Robert H Patrick: 8C (University of Missouri, Columbia) (Rutgers University)

Jeffrey P Prestemon: 2C Subhrendu K Pattanayak: 10E, 1C, 6H, 17E, 2I (U.S. Forest Service) (Research Triangle Institute)

Stef Proost: 16A, 17A, 17A, 6E, 9F Krishna P Paudel: 14C, 16I (Catholic University Leuven) (Louisiana State University)

Bill Provencher: 12B, 2E, 4I Bruce Peacock: 12E (University of Wisconsin) (U.S. National Park Service)

Helen Pushkarskaya: 16D, 9I Stephen Peck: 12H (Ohio State University) (FLECHE)

Philippe Quirion: 1A Lorenzo Pellegrini: 12H (CIRED, France) (Vrije Universiteit)

Shanti Gamper Rabindran: 11D, 1B Carlisle Pemberton: 12E (University of North Carolina) (University of the West Indies)

Lionel Ragot: 6C Linwood Pendleton: 9H (University Lille 1) (University of Southern California)

Donna Theresa Ramirez: 15B Christophe Pereau: 2A (University of Illinois) (University of Marne la Vallee)

Alan Randall: 2I, 3B, 4I, 9E, 9I Charles Perrings: 10A, 16F, 17D, 3G, 8H, 13F (Ohio State University) (University of York)

D N Rao: 9I Rüdiger Pethig: 11E, 16G, 7C (Jawaharlal Nehru University) (University of Siegen)

Gordon C Rausser: 10G, 11E, 11I John C Pezzey: 10D, 10D, 17B (University of California, Berkeley) (Australian National University)

Isha Ray: 13B Alexander Pfaff: 11A, 1D, 5B, 9A (University of California, Berkeley) (Columbia University)

Richard Ready: 12B, 6H Daniel J Phaneuf: 2E, 9B (Pennsylvania State University) (North Carolina State University)

Tom Reardon: 1B Mark Phillips: 14C (Michigan State University) (Morehead State University)

Peter Reinelt: 12F Basharat A K Pitafi: 6B (State University of New York, Fredonia) (University of Hawaii)

- 74 -

Gilles Rotillon: 15F, 2A, 8D, 16H Jules Reinhart: 4D (Université Paris X) (University of California, Berkeley)

James Roumasset: 16F, 9E Klaus Rennings: 17B (University of Hawaii) (Centre for European Economic Research)

Petrina Rowcroft: 17E Steven Renzetti: 10I, 6I (Scott Wilson Resource Consultants) (Brock University)

Robert Rowe: 5D, 6H Till Requate: 14H, 1A, 2A, 2F, 2F, 5G, 6C (Stratus Consulting) (Kiel University)

Anne Rozan: 2B, 3H Rafael Reuveny: 2D, 2D (Université Louis Pasteur) (Indiana University)

Santiago J Rubio: 15C, 16B, 8D Arnaud Reynaud: 11G, 2D (University of Valencia) (INRA, France)

Giovanni Ruta: 13E Francesco Ricci: 16H, 6A, 8H (World Bank) (Université Paris 1)

Elena Safirova: 16A Kenneth Richards: 4F, 5B (Resources for the Future) (Indiana University)

Roger Salmons: 6A Kyrre Rickertsen: 2H, 2H (University College London) (Agricultural University of Norway)

José Miguel Sánchez: 12D Mary Riddel: 17I (Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile) (University of Nevada, Las Vegas)

James Sanchirico: 11G, 9H, 15D Patrizia Riganti: 16I (Resources for the Future) (Queen's University)

Warren Sanderson: 16E Michael J Roberts: 14G, 2I (State University of New York, Stony Brook) (Economic Research Service, USDA)

Paroma Sanyal: 6C Elizabeth J Z Robinson: 11A, 10A, 2C (Brandeis University) (Oxford University)

Jean-Daniel Saphores: 14G, 2D, 2D María Xosé Vázquez Rodríguez: 1I (University of California, Irvine) (Facultade de Ciencias Económicas e Empresariais)

Eftichios Sartzetakis: 15C, 8D Brian Roe: 4H (University College of the Cariboo) (Ohio State University)

Jyothis Sathyapalan: 10A P C Roebeling: 4C (Institute for Social and Economic Change, India) (Development Economics Group)

Riccardo Scarpa: 12B, 14C, 15H Kimberly Rollins: 1C, 1G, 2C, 6G (University of York) (University of Guelph)

Monica Scatasta: 15I Eirik Romstad: 16D, 1F, 2F (Johns Hopkins University) (Agricultural University of Norway)

Henrik Scharin: 5A Daniel Rondeau: 17I, 1I, 5F (Beijer Institute) (Environment Canada)

Felix Schläpfer: 12B Randall S Rosenberger: 16C, 17C (Universität Zürich) (West Virginia University)

Wolfram Schlenker: 14C, 1E, 6A Mark R Rosenzweig: 16E (University of California, Berkeley) (University of Pennsylvania)

Uwe A Schneider: 10B, 11H Catarina Roseta-Palma: 6C (Iowa State University) (Universidade Nova de Lisboa)

- 75 -

Gerald Shively: 1B Albert Schram: 1F, 2F (Purdue University) (Universidad de Costa Rica)

James Shortle: 1D Katheline Schubert: 14E, 16G, 6A, 6C (Pennsylvania State University) (University Paris 1)

Ram K Shrestha: 12I William Schulze: 5F, 6F, 6H, 7E (University of Florida) (Cornell University)

Hilary Sigman: 3F, 9D Kurt Schwabe: 12F, 14C, 4C, 7C (Rutgers University) (University of California, Riverside)

Giovanni Signorello: 10A, 2I, 4E Sahin Sebnem: 4A (University of Catania) (University of Paris I)

Juha Siikamaki: 10A Silvia Secchi: 10C, 1H (Triangle Economic Research) (Iowa State University)

Khathu M Sikhitha: 4C Kathleen Segerson: 2I, 4C, 4F, 7E (University of Rhode Island) (University of Connecticut)

Erin Sills: 1I Gautam Sethi: 9H (North Carolina State University) (Bard College)

Leo Simon: 11I, 8D Chad Settle: 11A, 14E, 9A (University of California, Berkeley) (University of Tulsa)

Nathalie Simon: 17C Ron Shadbegian: 3F, 5E (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency)

Anders Skonhoft: 3I Huda Abdelwahab Sharawi: 12I (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) (University of Khartoum)

Arthur Small: 12A, 9A, 9A Shyamsunder Pd Sharma: 4D (Columbia University) (Wazirganj College)

Kenneth Small: 12C Basil M H Sharp: 16F, 1I (University of California, Irvine) (University of Auckland)

Mark Griffin Smith: 10I Daigee Shaw: 10H, 17H (Colorado College) (Academia Sinica)

Martin Smith: 7B, 8B, 9H Douglass Shaw: 14G, 17I, 2B, 13G (Duke University) (University of Nevada, Reno)

V K Smith: 3F, 6H, 6H, 7A, 9E, 13C Mordechai Shechter: 5A (North Carolina State University) (University of Haifa)

Brent Sohngen: 5B Jhih-Shyang Shih: 10C, 11H (Ohio State University) (Resources for the Future)

Havard Solem: 2F Jay P Shimshack: 3I, 9I (Norwegian University of Science & Technology) (University of California, Berkeley)

Douglas Southgate: 10G, 1B Young Chul Shin: 10F, 6G (Ohio State University) (Daejin University)

Florence Spitzenstetter: 3H Hiroaki Shirakawa: 6G (University of Strasbourg) (Hiroshima University)

Dale Squires: 11G Elena E Shirkova: 6D (U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service) (Kamchatka Institute of Ecology and Nature

Management) Scott Steele: 16H (Berea College)

- 76 -

Laura Taylor: 16C, 8A Karl W Steininger: 12C (Georgia State University) (University of Graz)

Michael A Taylor: 2I Annegret Steinmetz: 17E (Ohio State University) (Universität Heidelberg)

Sonja Teelucksingh: 17D Thomas Sterner: 12C (University of West Indies) (University of Gothenburg)

Mario Teisl: 1D, 4H Steven Stewart: 12B, 15H (University of Maine) (University of Tennessee)

Mette Termansen: 10G, 4I Jean Philippe Stijns: 8H (University of York) (University of California, Berkeley)

Henry Thille: 3I, 6A Ivar Strand: 16F, 1E, 9H (University of Guelph) (University of Maryland)

Gary Thompson: 1H, 2H, 2H Jon Strand: 17E, 5C, 6G (University of Arizona) (University of Oslo)

Dirgha Tiwari: 15B John K Stranlund: 15D, 5I, 6E, 6E (Tribhuvan University) (University of Massachusetts, Amherst)

Luiza Toma: 6D Elisabetta Strazzera: 15H (Catholic University Leuven) (University of Cagliari)

Michael Toman: 2F Elena Strukova: 4A, 6D (Resources for the Future) (Center for Environmental and Natural Resource

Economics, Moscow) Ted Tomasi: 14E (ENTRIX) Daniel Sturm: 11I

(University of Munich) Tom Tomich: 3C (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research)

Pavel Suchanek: 5B (University of British Columbia)

Ken Train: 4G Robert Sugden: 10F, 6F, 7E, 7E (University of California, Berkeley) (University of East Anglia)

Ronald L Trosper: 12I David Sunding: 1H, 15G (Northern Arizona University) (University of California, Berkeley)

Austin Troy: 15A William R Sutton: 4E (University of Vermont) (World Bank)

John Tschirhart: 1E Wojciech Suwala: 6D (University of Wyoming) (Polish Academy of Sciences)

Yacov Tsur: 12F, 15B Yoshito Takasaki: 1B (Hebrew University) (University of Tsukuba)

Matthew A Turner: 10C, 15A, 8B Yuki Takatsuka: 12B (Stanford University) (University of Tennessee)

Emi Y Uchida: 10G Kenji Takeuchi: 12B, 3B (University of California, Davis) (Kobe University)

Fahim Uddin: 15I Marialuisa Tamborra: 6D (Giri Institute Of Development Studies) (Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei)

Alistair Ulph: 11E, 8D, 13A Harald Tauchmann: 15F (University of Southampton) (Universität Heidelberg)

- 77 -

Nada Wasi: 10E, 14H Chieko Umetsu: 12F (University of California, San Diego) (Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, Japan)

Frank Wätzold: 10A, 1D Laurian Unnevehr: 4H (UFZ, Germany) (University of Illinois)

Bill Weber: 8F Juerg Utzinger: 11D (Southeast Missouri State University) (Princeton University)

Marca Weinberg: 7C Kurt van Dender: 17A (Economic Research Service, USDA) (University of California, Irvine)

Martin Weitzman: 3S René Van Der Kruk: 16C (Harvard University) (Free University Amsterdam)

Lihchyi Wen: 6B Ekko Van Ierland: 11C, 2A, 6I (Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research) (Wageningen University)

Quinn Weninger: 10C, 14D, 16F Cornelis Van Kooten: 1A (Iowa State University) (University of Nevada Reno)

Megan Werner: 14E, 15E Denise Van Regemorter: 11C, 16B, 9G (University of Florida) (Catholic University Leuven)

Justus Wesseler: 12E Daan Van Soest: 14H, 15B (Wageningen University) (Tilburg University)

William Wheeler: 14A, 9G Colin Vance: 15A (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency)

John Whitehead: 2B, 9B Sujitra Vassanadumrongdee: 17H (University of North Carolina, Wilmington) (Hiroshima University)

Dale Whittington: 17E, 17E, 1G, 5D Tom Verbeke: 14H (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) (Ghent University)

James Wilen: 9H Harmen Verbruggen: 11C, 15B, 3A (University of California, Davis) (Institute for Environmental Studies, Netherlands)

Melonie Williams: 8E Niels Vestergaard: 11G, 15D, 1E, 2D, 6E (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) (University of Southern Denmark)

Rob Williams: 17A Montse Viladrich-Grau: 5I, 11I (Macalester College) (Universidad Publica de Navarra)

Roberton Williams: 16B, 9E Jeffrey R Vincent: 17F, 2G, 3I, 4B (University of Texas) (University of California, San Diego)

Marc Willinger: 3H Herman Vollebergh: 10D, 6B, 8I (Université Louis Pasteur) (Erasmus University Rotterdam)

Julie Witcover: 14I, 3C Roger H Von Haefen: 2E, 9B (University of California, Davis) (Bureau of Labor Statistics)

Cees Withagen: 10D, 17B, 17D, 1I, 2F, 6B Christian Vossler: 7E (Free University) (Cornell University)

Ann Wolverton: 3F, 5G Tomislav Vukina: 16D (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) (North Carolina State University)

Grace Y Wong: 10B Randall Walsh: 12G, 14A (University of Florida) (University of Colorado)

Richard Woodward: 5I, 8G Hua Wang: 12D, 12D, 4E, 6E (Texas A&M University) (World Bank)

- 78 -

- 79 -

Brian Wright: 11E, 9G (University of California, Berkeley)

Gavin Wright: 8H (Stanford University)

Junjie Wu: 1D, 4F, 8B (Oregon State University)

Pei-Ing Wu: 15E (National Taiwan University)

Angels Xabadia: 14I, 1F (University de Girona and University of California, Berkeley)

Anastasios Xepapadeas: 11A, 12G, 14H, 16D, 16H (University of Crete)

Masaru Yarime: 6C (University of Tokyo)

Chia-Yu Yeh: 2E (Ohio State University)

Seung-Hoon Yoo: 17G, 9I (Hoseo University)

Kentaro Yoshida: 10E, 9B (PRIMAFF, Japan)

Mike Young: 6A (CSIRO Land and Water, Australia)

Zhihao Yu: 8D (University of Nottingham and Carleton University)

Jeffrey Zabel: 2B, 5C (Tufts University)

Amos Zemel: 15B, 3D (Ben Gurion University of Negev)

Xiao Zhang: 11F (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences)

Zheng Zhang: 14H (Beijing University)

ZhongXiang Zhang: 11C, 4A, 9G (East-West Center)

Jinhua Zhao: 2I, 3E, 8E, 8E (Iowa State University)

Xueqin Zhu: 2A (Wageningen University)

David Zilberman: 12D, 14A, 14A, 15B, 17I, 1F, 1H, 3H, 16E (University of California, Berkeley)

Clifford Zinnes: 14B (Harvard Institute for International Development)

Joshua Zivin: 11E (Columbia University)

Ji Zou: 2G, 8G (Renmin University of China)

Alix Peterson Zwane: 14I, 1B (Harvard University)


Recommended