Understanding Environmental Policy.
by Weible, Christopher M.
Understanding Environmental Policy
Cohen, Steven 2006. New York: Columbia University Press, 240 pages,
ISBN 0-231-13536-X (cloth) / 0-231-13537-8 (paper), US $74.50 (cloth),
US $26.50 (paper).
Steven Cohen argues that we are limited in our cognitive abilities
to comprehend complex environmental issues, so people simplify by
applying one or more cognitive lenses originating from their
organizational affiliations, academic training, political ideology, or
material interests. But simplification often leads to partial--or even
distorted--analysis of environmental issues. Cohen responds to this
problem by introducing a multidimensional framework to counteract our
susceptibility to rely on a single cognitive lens.
The first section of this book describes the multidimensional
framework. The framework consists of five dimensions: values, politics,
technology and science, policy design and economics, and management.
Each dimension represents a single cognitive lens. For example,
political scientists might focus on politics as the fundamental cause of
an environmental problem whereas an economist might focus on market
failure or the lack of proper incentives. Within each dimension, Cohen
lists guiding questions to narrow the descriptive focus. As an
analytical tool, the framework serves as a handy checklist of dimensions
and questions to facilitate problem analysis from multiple perspectives.
The middle section of the book presents an analysis of four case
studies to illustrate the usefulness of each dimension in clarifying
complex environmental issues. The environmental issues include municipal
garbage disposal, gasoline leaks from underground tanks, clean up of
toxic waste sites, and global climate change. Each case study is clearly
presented with a qualitative description of how each dimension
underscores different nuances of the environmental issue and of
obstacles that inhibit the development of improved environmental policy.
The concluding section presents a critique of the multidimensional
framework and offers suggestions for improving environmental policy. The
usefulness of the multidimensional framework is most evident in
comparing across environmental policy issues. Interestingly, Cohen shows
that some dimensions are more important than others depending on the
particular environmental issue. On the one hand, management capacity
prevents efforts to fix gasoline leaks from underground storage tanks
while politics is not a factor. On the other hand, politics thwarts New
York's efforts to improve its approaches to garbage disposal while
management capacity is not a factor. Across the four environmental
policy issues, Cohen argues that values are probably the most important
dimension, especially preferences for a high resource consumptive
lifestyle.
The legitimacy of Cohen's framework and the dimensions therein
is sup- ported by other theories of policymaking. From Hofferbert's
'Funnel of Causality' to Kingdon's 'Multiple
Streams,' existing policy theories have verified the importance of
the dimensions in Cohen's framework (Sabatier 1999). Cohen's
contribution is how he packages the dimensions in a simple-to-use
framework that fits into the toolbox of the typical policy analyst.
An interesting issue that Cohen could have spent more time
discussing is the interactive effects among the dimensions. How do
changes in public values alter an institutional agenda, shape policy
formulation, and affect management in implementation? What is the role
of scientific and technical information in designing policy? These are
important questions to ask because policy analysts will be hard pressed
to make strong descriptive inferences of any environmental policy issue
without describing the intersection of Cohen's dimensions.
One of the strengths of the multidimensional framework is that it
offers a platform for building theoretical and applied research for
improving environmental policy. Additional applications of the framework
are needed to investigate the importance of each dimension and the
questions therein, to help clarify ambiguity in terms, to weed out the
unimportant questions, and to include additional dimensions or questions
as needed. The current book would have benefited with a more explicit
and deliberate application and discussion of the questions within each
dimension. Hopefully, Cohen's multidimensional framework will
generate momentum among environmental professionals in this area.
This book is probably most useful for undergraduate or lower level
graduate environmental policy courses. It is ideal for structuring
student analysis of environmental policy as illustrated in the middle
chapters. The book is not too abstract and is accessible to students
with diverse backgrounds. Its success outside the classroom depends on
the insight it provides to people facing environmental issues to help
them take a skeptical look at their cognitive lenses and to look through
alternate lenses. In this respect, I expect the book to be successful as
well.
References
Sabatier, Paul A. (ed). 1999. Theories of the Policy Process.
Boulder, CO: West- view Press.
Reviewed by Christopher M. Weible, Georgia Institute of Technology,
School of Public Policy, Atlanta, GA
COPYRIGHT 2006 Wilfrid Laurier
University Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.