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December 2003
6 x 9, 318 pp., 19 illus.
$65.00/£48.95 (CLOTH)
Short

ISBN-10:
0-262-15108-1
ISBN-13:
978-0-262-15108-5

Other Editions
Paper (2003)
Series
Urban and Industrial Environments
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Community-Driven Regulation
Balancing Development and the Environment in Vietnam
Dara O'Rourke

Table of Contents

In Community-Driven Regulation Dara O’Rourke proposes a new policy model for pollution control, based on detailed case studies from rapidly industrializing Vietnam. He shows that environmental problems can be solved when affected community groups mobilize to pressure both state and industry and argues that this strategy, which he terms "community-driven regulation," used successfully in Vietnam, can achieve similar success in other countries.

Vietnam’s recent entry into the world economy has brought many benefits to its population—more jobs, higher income levels, more plentiful goods and services. But this very rapid growth of industry has also brought predictable environmental problems. Areas near industrial plants experience declining crop yields and polluted groundwater; residents downwind from factories suffer respiratory ailments. Vietnam thus serves as a model for nations dealing with environmental problems during the transition to an industrialized economy and global integration.

O’Rourke offers six detailed case studies, based on his own fieldwork in Vietnam, that show how strategies adopted by local communities achieved positive results despite a strong state bias toward development and the absence of existing advocacy groups, a free press, or politically vulnerable elected officials. The firms studied are both state-run and multinational; they include a Taiwanese textile factory, a state-owned fertilizer plant, and a Korean factory producing shoes for Nike. The communities affected range from traditional villages to urban neighborhoods. O’Rourke’s policy model of community-state synergy challenges traditional notions of state-centric environmental regulation and questions the growing literature that identifies market mechanisms as the best way to solve environmental problems in developing countries.

About the Author

Dara O’Rourke is Assistant Professor in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management at the University of California, Berkeley.


Awards

Winner of the 2005 Outstanding Publication Award given by the Environment and Technology Section of the American Sociological Association (ASA)





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