CAP Regimes and the European Countryside :Prospects for Integration Between Agricultural, Regional and Environmental Policies

Publication subTitle :Prospects for Integration Between Agricultural, Regional and Environmental Policies

Author: Brouwer   F.; Lowe   P.  

Publisher: CABI Publishing‎

Publication year: 2000

E-ISBN: 9780851999586

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780851993546

Subject: F0 Economics;F3 Agricultural Economy

Keyword: Economics Agriculture and Related Industries

Language: ENG

Access to resources Favorite

Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.

Description

This book reviews assessments on the environmental effects of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), and assesses the contribution of agricultural policy to environmental quality in the EU. It focuses on the role of agricultural policy in reducing harmful effects and/or creating benefits to the physical environment, landscape and nature. Emphasis is given to comparative studies, rather than any limited to one country. The commodity regimes of the CAP – e.g. the beef, wine and olive oil regimes – are considered in detail.

Chapter

Part 1 Introduction: The Environmental Reform of Agricultural Policy

2 The Environmental Effects of Reforming Agricultural Policies

3 Integration of Environmental Objectives into Agricultural Policy Making

Part 2 The Environmental Performance of the CAP Regimes

4 The Beef Regime

5 The Sheepmeat and Goatmeat Regime

6 The Arable Crops Regime and the Use of Pesticides

7 The Arable Crops Regime and Nitrogen Pollution Control

8 The Arable Crops Regime and the Countryside Implications

9 The Wine Regime

10 The Olive Oil Regime

11 Policies for Less Favoured Areas

12 The Agri-environmental Measures (2078/92)

13 Organic Farming

Part 3 Institutional Factors in Reorienting Agriculture

14 Do 'Soft' Regulations Matter?

15 National Cultural and Institutional Factors in CAP and Environment

16 Market Remuneration for Goods and Services Provided by Agriculture and Forestry

Part 4 Outlook

17 Economic and Environmental Impact of Agenda 2000

18 Agenda 2000: A Wasted Opportunity?

Index

The users who browse this book also browse


No browse record.