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Overview Evaluating effectiveness Pollution agreements: an example

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1 Overview Evaluating effectiveness Pollution agreements: an example
Montreal Protocol Whaling treaty Comparison of two regimes

2 Evaluating Effectiveness
Institutions/regimes/treaties can always be evaluated against TWO definitions of success #1: “Was goal achieved?” Or “How close did institution come to achieving its goal?” Compare actual behavior to goal #2: “Did institution cause behaviors or outcomes different than would have occurred otherwise?” Compare actual behavior to counterfactual

3 Pollution Agreements: Evaluating Effectiveness
Treaty In Force Take the Montreal Protocol. Was the Montreal Protocol effective at changing the behavior of industrialized countries? If so, what aspect of the treaty should receive credit for the success? Was it the sanctions threatened under the treaty? Or was the decline in their CFC production due to availability of alternatives that might have happened anyway? What about the developing countries? Were the rules offering them incentives to reduce CFC production less effective than the sanctions? And, do the Montreal Protocol’s provisions appear more or less effective than those of the Nitrogen Oxide Protocol of the Convention on Long Range Transboundary Air Pollution? Questions: Was either really influential? If so, what explains their effects and influence? Is it something about the rules? Or something about regulating CFCs which is different than regulating NOx? And, if we can identify which of the many possible explanations is the true one, how do we determine how to apply those lessons to other treaties? These questions apply to the whole range of environmental treaties from climate change and energy use to stratospheric ozone loss to acid rain in Europe to endangered species protection to biodiversity loss to wetlands protection and water quality. Later on in the talk I will be looking at fisheries as one arena in which we can develop some of the theory and methodology so that it can be applied across all these arenas.

4 Pollution Agreements: Evaluating Effectiveness
Treaty In Force Take the Montreal Protocol. Was the Montreal Protocol effective at changing the behavior of industrialized countries? If so, what aspect of the treaty should receive credit for the success? Was it the sanctions threatened under the treaty? Or was the decline in their CFC production due to availability of alternatives that might have happened anyway? What about the developing countries? Were the rules offering them incentives to reduce CFC production less effective than the sanctions? And, do the Montreal Protocol’s provisions appear more or less effective than those of the Nitrogen Oxide Protocol of the Convention on Long Range Transboundary Air Pollution? Questions: Was either really influential? If so, what explains their effects and influence? Is it something about the rules? Or something about regulating CFCs which is different than regulating NOx? And, if we can identify which of the many possible explanations is the true one, how do we determine how to apply those lessons to other treaties? These questions apply to the whole range of environmental treaties from climate change and energy use to stratospheric ozone loss to acid rain in Europe to endangered species protection to biodiversity loss to wetlands protection and water quality. Later on in the talk I will be looking at fisheries as one arena in which we can develop some of the theory and methodology so that it can be applied across all these arenas.

5 Pollution Agreements: Evaluating Effectiveness
Treaty In Force COUNTERFACTUAL: Predicted Emissions if Treaty Wasn’t Signed Take the Montreal Protocol. Was the Montreal Protocol effective at changing the behavior of industrialized countries? If so, what aspect of the treaty should receive credit for the success? Was it the sanctions threatened under the treaty? Or was the decline in their CFC production due to availability of alternatives that might have happened anyway? What about the developing countries? Were the rules offering them incentives to reduce CFC production less effective than the sanctions? And, do the Montreal Protocol’s provisions appear more or less effective than those of the Nitrogen Oxide Protocol of the Convention on Long Range Transboundary Air Pollution? Questions: Was either really influential? If so, what explains their effects and influence? Is it something about the rules? Or something about regulating CFCs which is different than regulating NOx? And, if we can identify which of the many possible explanations is the true one, how do we determine how to apply those lessons to other treaties? These questions apply to the whole range of environmental treaties from climate change and energy use to stratospheric ozone loss to acid rain in Europe to endangered species protection to biodiversity loss to wetlands protection and water quality. Later on in the talk I will be looking at fisheries as one arena in which we can develop some of the theory and methodology so that it can be applied across all these arenas.

6 Pollution Agreements: Evaluating Effectiveness
Treaty In Force COUNTERFACTUAL: Predicted Emissions if Treaty Wasn’t Signed Success of Treaty Relative to COUNTERFACTUAL Take the Montreal Protocol. Was the Montreal Protocol effective at changing the behavior of industrialized countries? If so, what aspect of the treaty should receive credit for the success? Was it the sanctions threatened under the treaty? Or was the decline in their CFC production due to availability of alternatives that might have happened anyway? What about the developing countries? Were the rules offering them incentives to reduce CFC production less effective than the sanctions? And, do the Montreal Protocol’s provisions appear more or less effective than those of the Nitrogen Oxide Protocol of the Convention on Long Range Transboundary Air Pollution? Questions: Was either really influential? If so, what explains their effects and influence? Is it something about the rules? Or something about regulating CFCs which is different than regulating NOx? And, if we can identify which of the many possible explanations is the true one, how do we determine how to apply those lessons to other treaties? These questions apply to the whole range of environmental treaties from climate change and energy use to stratospheric ozone loss to acid rain in Europe to endangered species protection to biodiversity loss to wetlands protection and water quality. Later on in the talk I will be looking at fisheries as one arena in which we can develop some of the theory and methodology so that it can be applied across all these arenas.

7 Pollution Agreements: Evaluating Effectiveness
Treaty In Force Take the Montreal Protocol. Was the Montreal Protocol effective at changing the behavior of industrialized countries? If so, what aspect of the treaty should receive credit for the success? Was it the sanctions threatened under the treaty? Or was the decline in their CFC production due to availability of alternatives that might have happened anyway? What about the developing countries? Were the rules offering them incentives to reduce CFC production less effective than the sanctions? And, do the Montreal Protocol’s provisions appear more or less effective than those of the Nitrogen Oxide Protocol of the Convention on Long Range Transboundary Air Pollution? Questions: Was either really influential? If so, what explains their effects and influence? Is it something about the rules? Or something about regulating CFCs which is different than regulating NOx? And, if we can identify which of the many possible explanations is the true one, how do we determine how to apply those lessons to other treaties? These questions apply to the whole range of environmental treaties from climate change and energy use to stratospheric ozone loss to acid rain in Europe to endangered species protection to biodiversity loss to wetlands protection and water quality. Later on in the talk I will be looking at fisheries as one arena in which we can develop some of the theory and methodology so that it can be applied across all these arenas. GOAL: Emissions Level Treaty Sought to Achieve

8 Pollution Agreements: Evaluating Effectiveness
Treaty In Force Take the Montreal Protocol. Was the Montreal Protocol effective at changing the behavior of industrialized countries? If so, what aspect of the treaty should receive credit for the success? Was it the sanctions threatened under the treaty? Or was the decline in their CFC production due to availability of alternatives that might have happened anyway? What about the developing countries? Were the rules offering them incentives to reduce CFC production less effective than the sanctions? And, do the Montreal Protocol’s provisions appear more or less effective than those of the Nitrogen Oxide Protocol of the Convention on Long Range Transboundary Air Pollution? Questions: Was either really influential? If so, what explains their effects and influence? Is it something about the rules? Or something about regulating CFCs which is different than regulating NOx? And, if we can identify which of the many possible explanations is the true one, how do we determine how to apply those lessons to other treaties? These questions apply to the whole range of environmental treaties from climate change and energy use to stratospheric ozone loss to acid rain in Europe to endangered species protection to biodiversity loss to wetlands protection and water quality. Later on in the talk I will be looking at fisheries as one arena in which we can develop some of the theory and methodology so that it can be applied across all these arenas. GOAL: Emissions Level Treaty Sought to Achieve Failure of Treaty Relative to GOAL

9 What We Observe

10 Counterfactual Based on Member’s Prior Behavior Implies Effect

11 Counterfactual Based on NON-Member’s Behavior Implies Effect
` Counterfactual Based on NON-Member’s Behavior Implies Effect

12 BUT Behavior Relative to Goal Implies NO Effect

13 Whaling and the IWC

14 “Having decided to conclude a convention to provide for the proper conservation of whale stocks and thus make possible the orderly development of the whaling industry” (ICRW, 1946)

15 “Having decided to conclude a convention to provide for the proper conservation of whale stocks and thus make possible the orderly development of the whaling industry” (ICRW, 1946) Goal

16 Failure Relative To Goal

17 Counterfactual

18 Success Relative To Counterfactual
Catch LOWER than would have been otherwise, allowing population to recover Success Relative To Counterfactual But higher population allows MORE catch for longer than would have been possible otherwise

19 Both a success and a failure
Counterfactual Both a success and a failure Goal Success Relative To Counterfactual Failure Relative To Goal

20 Catch may cause Quota Rather than Vice Versa Implies NO effect

21 Six types of social control
Consequences: change costs to HAVE engaged in behavior Deterrence – increase expected costs of violation Remuneration – increase expected benefit of compliance Opportunities: change costs/option TO engage in behavior Generative – new capacities and opportunities Preclusive – remove opportunities Perceptions: change perceived costs to engage in behavior Cognitive – new information Normative – new values Which strategies are available depends on type of problem

22 Evaluating Effectiveness
Institutions/regimes/treaties can always be evaluated against TWO definitions of success #1: “Was goal achieved?” Or “How close did institution come to achieving its goal?” Compare actual behavior to goal #2: “Did institution cause behaviors or outcomes different than would have occurred otherwise?” Compare actual behavior to counterfactual


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