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Articles by Jason D Scorse

Jason Scorse, Ph.D., is Associate Professor and Chair of the International Environmental Policy Program at the Monterey Institute of International Studies. His book What Environmentalists Need to Know About Economics is available at Amazon.

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  • It’s not driven by demand

    Whaling nations have amassed a blubber mountain, despite desperate measures like mixing the stuff into dog food. It is the principle, apparently, that counts.

    Bottom line: it's not demand for whale meat driving whaling, but politics, stubbornness, and claims of cultural rights.

  • Some reservations about global warming policy

    As one who advocates a rational and methodologically sound approach to global warming policy, I think that the just-published Stern Report provides a strong case that action should be taken.

    Before I continue with why I still have some reservations, let me suggest that Grist readers who are critical of economics take a good look at this report. It is the breadth of the economic analysis, the attention to detail, and the range of policy options (informed by sound economic analysis) that make this report so powerful. It is also endorsed by some of the most prominent economists in the world, which gives it immense credibility. It is because it is the work of good economists that it is being taken seriously and may actually motivate government action. Whether you like it or not, the two most powerful groups of scientists engaged in global warming policy are climatologists and economists.

    Now to why I am still wary of the conclusions.

  • Denialists are not the only ones

    There are many who scoff at the notion that climate change is really happening; they are one type of ideologue -- the perpetual skeptic impervious to reason and scientific inquiry.

    But there is another type.

  • New scientific advance could help whales

    This advance could nullify one of the primary excuses (I mean arguments) that nations use to continue whaling under the auspices of "scientific research." But of course, it won't do anything about the argument that whales are just like any other animal we eat, and therefore can be hunted like any other, which it seems more and more environmentalists accept.