1987 



"The essays in this volume address themselves to the role, both existing 

 and potential, of international institutions in coping with the environmental 

 impacts of the widespread application of an increasingly potent science and 

 technology." Among the institutions treated are: the UN, the WMO, regional 

 organizations, and organizations relating to the issues of trade and develop- 

 ing countries. 

 Kneese, Allen, Sidney E. Rolfe, and Joseph W. Hameds, eds. Managing the 

 Environment: International Economic Cooperation for Pollution Control. (Praeger 

 special studies in international economics and development.) New York, 

 Praeger Publishers, 1972. 356 p. 



"This book adds a new dimension to the literature of international en- 

 vironmental problems. It goes beyond the usual discussion of oil spills or 

 river pollution crossing national boundaries and the consequent need for 

 bilateral or multilateral agreements between nations sharing common re- 

 sources or boundaries. It raises the more complex question of the international 

 trade consequences of varying national efforts to curb pollution and how 

 these economic effects might be moderated through international agreements 

 and agencies." 

 Kramer, John M. "Pollution in the USSR: A Partial Test of the Convergence 

 Theory." Paper presented at the Conference on Soviet Resource Management 

 and the Environment, University of Washington, Seattle, June 1974. 37 p. 

 Leider, Robert. "From Choice to Determinant: the Environmental Issue in Inter- 

 national Relations." [Washington] National War College, Strategic Research 

 Group, 1972. 21 p. 



This article "attempts to classify the behavior of nations as they adjust 

 to the new environmental realities. From there it seeks to project the altered 

 concepts and power ingredients that may emerge and could redefine national 

 interests and supporting strategies in the coming decade." 



Revised version printed in Orbis, v. 76, winter 1973: 881-891. 

 Lobanov, L. "International Cooperation and the Environment." International 

 Affairs, No. 11, Nov. 1973: 47-53. 



Reviews Soviet involvement in international environmental affairs. 

 Merritt, Weldon I. "The Soviet-U.S. Environmental Protection Agreement." 



Natural Resources Journal, v. 14, Apr. 1974: 275-281. 

 Miller, A. J. "Doomsday Politics: Prospects for International Cooperation." 

 International Journal, v. 28, winter 1972-73: 121-133. 



Examines "a representative sample of the proposals that environmentalists 

 and concerned political scientists have suggested as the basis of future inter- 

 national co-operation and, more important, to assess their prospects of 

 success." 

 Muir, J. Dapray. "Legal and Ecological Aspects of the International Energy 

 Situation." International Lawyer, v. 8, Jan. 1974: 1-10. 



"It is clear that the energy situation is going to complicate considerably 



national and international efforts to resolve developing ecological problems. 



Already, the lines are being drawn by those concerned with the environment 



and those concerned with economic growth." 



Natural Resources Journal. [Special number on international issues.] v. 13, April 



1973. 



Contents: Ian Brownhe, A survey of international customary rules of 

 environmental protection; Lynton K. Caldwell, Concepts in development of 

 international environmental policies; E. D. Brown, The conventional law of 

 the environment; Michael Hardy, The United Nations Environment Pro- 

 gramme; L. F. E. Goldie, International impact reports and the conservation 

 of the ocean environment; Albert E. Utton, International water quality law; 

 Howard J. Taubenfeld, International environmental law: air and outer 

 space; J. W. Samuels, International control of weather modification activities: 

 peril or policy; A. Dan Tarlock, Land use choice: national prerogative vs. 

 international policy and Ludwik A. Teclaff, The impact of environmental 

 concern on the development of international law. 

 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. The Polluter Pays 

 Principle: Definition, Analysis, Implementation. [Paris, 1975] 117 p. Pollu- 

 tion control — [OECD countries]— -Finance/Environmental poUcy — [OECD 

 countries] 



