Asia's Environmental Problems: Common Features, and Possible Solutions
Date
Authors
Howes, Stephen
Wyrwoll, Paul
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia (ERIA)
Abstract
Asia’s developing economies are faced with serious environmental problems that
threaten to undermine future growth, food security, and regional stability. This
chapter considers four major environmental challenges that policymakers across
developing Asia must address in the coming decade: water management, air
pollution, deforestation and land degradation, and climate change. These challenges,
each unique in their own way, all display the features of “wicked problems”. First
developed in the context of urban planning, and now applied much more broadly,
wicked problems are dynamic, complex, encompass many issues and stakeholders,
and evade straightforward, lasting solutions. Detailed case studies are presented in
this chapter to demonstrate the intricacy and importance of Asia’s environmental
challenges. The fundamental implication of this finding is that there will be no easy
or universal solutions to Asia’s environmental problems. This is a warning against
over-optimism and blueprint or formulaic solutions. It is not, however, a counsel for
despair. We suggest seven broad principles that may be useful across the board.
These are: a focus on co-benefits; an emphasis on stakeholder participation; a
commitment to scientific research; an emphasis on long-term planning; pricing
reform; tackling corruption, in addition to generally bolstering institutional capacity
with regard to environmental regulation; and a strengthening of regional
approaches and international support.
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Book Title
Moving Toward A New Development Model For East Asia- The Role of Domestic Policy And Regional Cooperation
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Access Statement
Free Access via publisher website
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DOI
Restricted until
2099-12-31