Workshop: Valuing and Managing Ecosystems: Economic Research Sponsored by NSF/EPA (1998)
Paper Number: EE-0409
Document Date: 10/29/1998
Author(s): Environmental Law Institute
Subject Area(s):
Economic Analysis, Benefit-Cost Analysis, Ecological Benefits, Stated Preference Surveys, Ecosystem Valuation
Keywords: Economic Analysis, Benefit-Cost Analysis, Ecological Benefits, Stated Preference Surveys, Ecosystem Valuation
Summary:
The purpose of the Environmental Policy and Economics Workshop Series is to hold in-depth workshops on timely topics that will further the use of economics as a tool for environmental decision making. Both NSF/EPA grant recipients and researchers (from EPA, fellow Federal agencies, academia, and others) will be invited to attend and discuss their on-going research. Topics will be chosen based on relevance to current EPA issues and, more broadly, to issues of concern to the environmental economics community. These topics include exploration of innovations in economic research methods as well as how research will further environmental policy making and future environmental economic studies.
“Valuing and Managing Ecosystems: Economic Research Sponsored by NSF/EPA” was the first workshop of this series. The Workshop included the following papers:
Morning Session – Estimating the Value of Ecosystem Resources
- Paper One: “Valuing Research Leads: Bioprospecting and the Conservation of Genetic Resources,” by Gordon Rausser and Arthur Small
- Paper Two: “Decision-Making Under Uncertainty in the Conservation of Biological Diversity,” by Andrew Solow, Stephen Polasky, Jeffrey Camm, Raymond O’Connor and Blair Csuti
Afternoon Session – Improving Stated Preference Valuation of Ecosystems
- Paper One: “Developing Conjoint Stated Preference Methods for Valuation of Environmental Resources Within Their Ecological Context,” by James Opaluch and Stephen Swallow
- Paper Two: “Methods and Applications for Ecosystem Valuation: A Collage,” by Stephen Swallow, Michael Spencer, Christopher Miller, Peter Paton, Robert Deegen, Laurienne Whinstanley, and Jason Shogren.
This workshop is part of the Environmental Policy and Economics Workshop Series.