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Policy Success in an Age of Gridlock
How the Toxic Substances Control Act was Finally Reformed
The Lautenberg Act is shown as an indicator of overall changes due to regulatory efforts abroad as well as in the United States.
Lawrence S. Rothenberg (Author)
9781108464918, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 27 June 2018
75 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 0.5 cm, 0.16 kg
Since 1990, polarization hindered changing environmental policy statutorily. Yet, in mid-2016 the Lautenberg Act regulating toxics - chemicals employed in commerce - was passed, winning business and environmental support. What might explain this? Has the Trump administration undercut the law's effects? Does the Act's passage portend more progressive actions? We show that the Act was a function of the status quo changing due to regulatory efforts abroad and in the United States, and from outside pressures on business. These influences impacted implementation, with the Trump administration not targeting toxics regulation analogous to other programs. Further, the processes we observe for toxics may not be unique.
Subject Areas: Environmental monitoring [TQD], The environment [RN]