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Thursday, January 9, 2014

Risk, Uncertainty and Precaution: Lessons from the History of US Environmental Law by Robert V. Percival :: SSRN

Robert Percival, an exemplar of what it means to be an engaged scholar, and a China hand, has a new essay exploring the history and importance of the "precautionary principle", much resisted by those who worry most about the cost of regulation, and celebrated by those who emphasize prevention.  Follow Bob at Global Environmental Law Blog. - GWC
h/t Environmental Law & History

Risk, Uncertainty and Precaution: Lessons from the History of US Environmental Law by Robert V. Percival :: SSRN:
by Robert Percival // University of Maryland
Abstract
Globalization and expanding world trade are creating new pressures to harmonize environmental standards. Countries increasingly are borrowing legal and regulatory policy innovations from one another, moving toward greater harmonization of regulatory policies. Regulatory policy generally seeks to prevent harm before it occurs, but the reality is that it usually has been more reactive than precautionary, responding only after harm has become manifest. As regulators seek to improve their responses to new and emerging environmental risks, it is useful to consider what lessons can be learned from past experience with regulatory policy.
This chapter reviews controversies over regulatory policy through the lens of history. It discusses the precautionary principle and why it is valuable even if it does not purport to answer the question of how stringent regulatory policy should be. It also considers recent studies that assess whether regulatory policy is more precautionary in the United States or the European Union and why it is difficult to make confident, comparative conclusions. The chapter then examines the history of how precaution has been incorporated into U.S. environmental law. It demonstrates that, despite the law’s promise to prevent harm before it occurs, regulatory policy has been largely reactive, concentrating primarily on highly visible problems only after harm has become manifest. After reviewing the state of contemporary regulatory politics in the U.S., the chapter concludes by analyzing lessons that can be learned to improve future regulatory policy.
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