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| DOI | 10.1080/03085147.2012.760347 | ||||
| Año | 2014 | ||||
| Tipo | artículo de investigación |
Citas Totales
Autores Afiliación Chile
Instituciones Chile
% Participación
Internacional
Autores
Afiliación Extranjera
Instituciones
Extranjeras
Emissions trading schemes have gained an important degree of momentum in recent years, rapidly becoming mainstream solutions to deal with the negative environmental consequences of human activity such as pollution and global warming. However there is still little empirical knowledge about what specific kind of work emissions trading schemes do. Using the analytical tools provided by science and technology studies, especially developments studying markets and economic practices, this paper looks to contribute to filling this void by exploring three kinds of work that emissions trading schemes might do: performing a textbook market of emissions permits, performing a civilized market in which a multitude of heterogeneous actors participate and as exemplars of the validity of certain economic knowledge. In order to explore the usability of this conceptualization the paper will then analyze one of earliest concrete implementations of this device: an emissions trading scheme introduced to deal with industrial air pollution in the city of Santiago (Chile) in the early 1990s. Through a historical genealogy, it will show this emissions trading scheme working not mainly as a textbook market, but as a civilized one and as a powerful exemplar that helped to mobilize both command-and-control regulation and neoliberal environmental economics to/from Chile and elsewhere.
| Ord. | Autor | Género | Institución - País |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ureta, Sebastian | Hombre |
TECH UNIV BERLIN - Alemania
Universidad Alberto Hurtado - Chile Technical University of Berlin - Alemania University Alberto Hurtado - Chile Technische Universität Berlin - Alemania |
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| Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung |
| Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung |
| Agradecimiento |
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| The underlying project ‘Innovation in Governance’ (grant number 01UU0906) from which this publication derives is funded by the Federal Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF), Germany. Responsibility for the contents of this publication lies entirely with the author. I acknowledge the very helpful comments on early drafts of this paper by Jan-Peter Voß, Arno Simons, José Ossandon and the three anonymous referees from Economy and Society. |