Both Sides of the Border Transboundary Environmental Management Issues Facing Mexico and the United States /
The Mexican -- United States border represents much more than the meeting place of two nations. Our border communities are often a line of first defense -- absorbing the complex economic, environmental and social impacts of globalization that ripple through the region. In many ways, our success or f...
Corporate Author: | |
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Other Authors: | , , |
Format: | Electronic |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Dordrecht :
Springer Netherlands,
2002.
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Series: | The Economics of Non-Market Goods and Resources,
2 |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | View fulltext via EzAccess |
Table of Contents:
- Law, Politics, and Institutions for a Border Environment
- Improving Institutional Response to Environmental Problems
- Impact of Two NAFTA Institutions on Border Water Infrastructure
- Binational Cooperation and the Environment at the U.S.-Mexico Border: A Mexican Perspective
- Characteristics of the Border Community
- Characteristics of Border Communities
- ỚSOff the Backs of OthersỚ<U+00fd>: The Political ecology of credit, debt, and class formation and transformation among the Colonias of New Mexico and Elsewhere
- Immigration, Agriculture, and the Border
- Border water
- Financing Bilateral Water Projects on the U.S.-Mexico Border: Past, Present and Future
- Lessons in Transboundary Resource Management from Ambos Nogales
- Changes in Trade Policy and Wastewater Emissions for a Border Watershed
- The Geography of Water Transfers and Urbanization in Baja and Southern California
- Restoring Instream Flows Economically: Perspectives from an International River Basin
- Air Pollution, Transportation, Energy, Hazardous Materials
- Solving Transboundary Air Quality Problems in the Paso del Norte Region
- Border Congestion, Air Quality, and Commerce
- U.S. Transportation Responses to NAFTA: A Window on U.S.-Mexico Transport Issues
- The US-Mexico Border Energy Zone
- Whither Hazardous-materials Management in the U.S.-Mexico Border Region?
- Biological Resources, Terrestrial and Quatic Habitat Protection
- Divergence in Californian Vegetation and Fire Regimes Induced by Differences in Fire Management across the U.S.-Mexico Boundary
- Whales and Shared Coastal and Marine Management of the Border Pacific
- Sea Turtle Conservation across the Shared Marine Border
- Migration of Exotic Pests: Phytosanitary Regulations and Cooperative Policies to Protect U.S. Ecosystems and Agricultural Interests.