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Environmental Federalism Revisited: Second‐Order Devolution in Air Quality Regulation

Neal D. Woods and Matthew Potoski

Review of Policy Research, 2010, vol. 27, issue 6, 721-739

Abstract: In this paper we examine states' use of local clean air agencies and provide a preliminary assessment of what causes states to devolve air quality policy authority to the local level. Data from a unique comparative state survey shows that states vary widely in the number of local clean air agencies they employ and the amount of authority these agencies have to set standards, monitor air quality, and enforce regulations. Multivariate analyses suggest that second‐order devolution is partly driven by a general propensity to decentralize policy authority, but that policy‐specific factors relating to the problem and interest group environment affect devolution as well. These findings indicate that local agencies play an important role in U.S. air quality regulation, and that the dynamics of state devolution to local agencies deserve further study.

Date: 2010
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https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1541-1338.2010.00468.x

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