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Urban Affairs Review | 2018

Metropolitan Eco-Regimes and Differing State Policy Environments: Comparing Environmental Governance in the Portland–Vancouver Metropolitan Area

Paul Thiers; Mark Stephan; Sean N. Gordon; Alexander Walker

The Portland Metropolitan region, a single economic and ecological region with a bifurcated state and local governance structure, provides an opportunity to compare governance models and state policy environments in a single region. Using stakeholder interviews and secondary sources, we examine the role of state government policy in shaping and supporting different regimes. We find that Portland exhibits a stable, “smart-growth” regime that we characterized as a metropolitan eco-regime whereas Vancouver is in a period of fragmentation without a stable metropolitan regime. This is best explained by the differing state-level regulatory contexts and the different forms of polycentricity influenced by state action. Differences in regime and governance structure result in differently drawn and expanded urban growth boundaries with subsequent differences in land-use outcomes. We conclude with observations about state-level action and subsequent forms of polycentricity to support metropolitan eco-regimes.


Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems | 2018

Does organic farming present greater opportunities for employment and community development than conventional farming? A survey-based investigation in California and Washington

Lynn Finley; M. Jahi Chappell; Paul Thiers; James Moore

ABSTRACT Organic farming may present opportunities for job creation over and above those provided by conventional agriculture; this study is one of a small number to have empirically examined this proposition. We compared countywide averages of hired farm labor from the USDA’s 2007 Agricultural Census with data collected through a mirrored survey of organic farmers in the same counties in Washington and California. Based on mixed-effects linear models to estimate differences (if any) in employment between organic farms and countywide farm averages, our analysis indicated that organic farms employed more workers per acre (95% CI: 2–12% more). Further, a greater proportion (95% CI: 13–43% more) of hired labor on organic farms worked 150 days or more compared to the average farm, suggesting increased labor requirements—and potentially more secure employment—on organic farms. We conclude the present study by considering possible policy implications of our findings with regard to organic agriculture as part of regional economic development strategies.


Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space | 2018

The evolution of China’s emission trading mechanisms: From international offset market to domestic Emission Trading Scheme:

Feng Ba; Paul Thiers; Yonggong Liu

With the decline of the international market under the Clean Development Mechanism, China is establishing a national Emission Trading Scheme by setting up emission cap and trade rules for high emission industries in seven pilot areas. The shift from the international to domestic market and from an offset program to a true cap and trade mechanism requires several significant changes. This paper reviews the development and evolution of China’s carbon trading market policy instruments. We find that there are substantial changes in both structure and policy. First, Emission Trading Scheme is a broad cap-and-trade mechanism with many new stakeholders added to those already involved in China’s Clean Development Mechanism. Second, the administrative structure is decentralized compared to that of the Clean Development Mechanism. Third, while the Emission Trading Scheme is best thought of as a new policy, China’s experience with the Clean Development Mechanism influences that policy. A large number of Clean Development Mechanism projects are being converted into offsets for the national Emission Trading Scheme market, and many institutional stakeholders that emerged during the Clean Development Mechanism are now involved in the Emission Trading Scheme. The combination of new policies and stakeholders, a decentralization of structure and the conversion of Clean Development Mechanism projects raise questions regarding the integrity of the cap and the enforcement of compliance as the Emission Trading Scheme is expanded into a nationwide system.


Agriculture and Human Values | 2005

Using global organic markets to pay for ecologically based agricultural development in China

Paul Thiers


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences | 2014

Relationships Between Environmental Governance and Water Quality in a Growing Metropolitan Area of the Pacific Northwest, USA

Heejun Chang; Paul Thiers; Noelwah R. Netusil; J. A. Yeakley; Gretchen Rollwagen-Bollens; Stephen M. Bollens; S. Singh


Landscape and Urban Planning | 2014

How well has land-use planning worked under different governance regimes? A case study in the Portland, OR-Vancouver, WA metropolitan area, USA

Jeffrey D. Kline; Paul Thiers; Connie P. Ozawa; J. Alan Yeakley; Sean N. Gordon


Archive | 2014

Agroecological Assessment of Farming in the Rural-Urban Interface: Building Resilient Regional Food Systems

Principal Investigator; Paul Thiers; M. Jahi Chappell


Archive | 2013

Portland-Vancouver ULTRA-Ex: Evaluating Relationships Between Governance and Environmental Quality in Urban Ecosystems

J. Alan Yeakley; Sally L. Duncan; Steve Bollens; Connie P. Ozawa; Vivek Shandas; Heejun Chang; Marion Dresner; Sean N. Gordon; John A. Harrison; Jeffrey D. Kline; Anita T. Morzillo; Noelwah R. Netusil; Gretchen Rollwagen-Bollens; Mark Stephan; Paul Thiers


Archive | 2013

Agroecological Assessment of Farming in the Rural-Urban Interface: Building Resilient Regional Food Systems PrincipalInvestigator

Marcia Ostrom; Lynne Carpenter-Boggs; Paul Thiers; M. Jahi Chappell; Judith Wait; Diane Hunter


Archive | 2011

How do Ecological Facts Become Policy Relevant Information? Comparing Public Participation and Regulatory Drivers in the Portland-Vancouver Region

Paul Thiers; Mark Stephan

Collaboration


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M. Jahi Chappell

Washington State University Vancouver

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Mark Stephan

Washington State University Vancouver

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Sean N. Gordon

Portland State University

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Connie P. Ozawa

Portland State University

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Heejun Chang

Portland State University

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Jeffrey D. Kline

United States Forest Service

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