Notes and References
1. S.P. Hays. 1989. Beauty, Health,
and Permanence: Environmental Politics in the United States,
19551985. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
The following sources provide polling data that demonstrate
the nature and depth of public opinion on the environment:
The Polling Report, Inc. Multiple polls, including Gallup,
ABC News, Newsweek, Harris. Accessed at www.pollingreport.com/enviro.htm
on April 26, 2002.
League of Conservation Voters Education Fund. Multiple polls
from 1999 and 2000. Accessed at http://www.voteenvironment.org/media_debunking_env_myths_data.html
on November 21, 2001.
2. Christine Vogan. Pollution Abatement
and Control Expenditures, 197394. Survey of Current
Business, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of
Commerce. http://www.bea.doc.gov/bea/an/0996eed/maintext.htm;
accessed August 8, 2001.
3. Note that costs of compliance with wetlands,
endangered species, and similar regulatory programs, plus
voluntary actions by the public and private sector, are probably
also significant as well, but are not included.
4. Executive Office of the President,
National Science and Technology Council, Committee on Environment
and Natural Resources. National Environmental Monitoring and
Research Workshop Proceedings. February 25, 1997.
5. Council on Environmental Quality.
1970. Environmental Quality: The First Annual Report of the
Council on Environmental Quality, p. 237. Washington, DC:
U.S. Government Printing Office.
6. National Academy of Public Administration.
1995. Setting Priorities, Getting Results: A New Direction
for the Environmental Protection Agency. Washington, DC: National
Academy of Public Administration.
National Research Council, Committee to Evaluate
Indicators for Monitoring Aquatic and Terrestrial Environments.
2000. Ecological Indicators for the Nation. Washington, DC:
National Academy Press. http://www.nap.edu/catalog/9720.html.
7. This situation exists in spite of several
efforts to prepare and sustain periodic reporting on indicators
and trends. For example, the Council on Environmental Quality
published two major reports on environmental indicators and
trends, one in 1981 and one in 1989, and the Conservation
Foundation, a nonprofit organization, prepared three major
reports (in 1982, 1984, and 1987) on environmental indicators
and trends:
Conservation Foundation. 1982. State of the Environment
1982: A Report from the Conservation Foundation. Washington,
DC.
Conservation Foundation. 1984. State of the Environment:
An Assessment at Mid-decade. Washington, DC.
Conservation Foundation. 1987. State of the Environment:
A View toward the Nineties. Washington, DC.
Council on Environmental Quality. 1981. Environmental trends.
Executive Office of the President, Washington, DC.
Council on Environmental Quality. 1989. Environmental trends.
Cosponsored by the Interagency Advisory Committee on Environmental
Trends, Executive Office of the President. Washington, DC.
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