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005 20250711142747.0
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020 _a9780262539197
040 _aBDCtgAUW
_cBDCtgAUW
_dBDCtgAUW
050 _aHD1683.U5 L38
100 _a Lave, Rebecca
_eAuthor
_977765
245 _aStreams of Revenue:
_bThe Restoration Economy and the Ecosystems It Creates
260 _aCambridge, Massachusetts:
_b The MIT Press,
_c2020
300 _a192 pages;
_c23 cm
520 _a"One of the most influential, and perhaps surprising,developments in environmental policy in recent decades is the idea that we can protect the environment from the negative impacts of economic development by making environmental protection itself more economic. The goal is to reduce environmental harm not by preventing it, but by pricing it. Using stream mitigation banking, that is the market for rivers and streams under Section 404 of the US Clean Water Act, as a case, Lave and Doyle explain where market-based environmental management approaches came from, how they work in practice, and what they do on ground"
650 _a Wetland mitigation banking
_zUnited States.
_977766
650 _a Stream restoration
_x Economic aspects
_zUnited States.
_977767
650 _aRestoration ecology
_xEconomic aspects
_zUnited States.
_977768
650 _a Ecosystem services
_z United States.
_977769
650 _aEnvironmental policy
_x Economic aspects
_zUnited States.
_977770
700 _aDoyle, Martin
_eAuthor
_977771
942 _2lcc
_cBK
_n0
999 _c14656
_d14656
887 _28
_aPapia Akter
888 _28