Created: Jul 16, 2007
Updated: Jul 16, 2007
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Environmental Policy Making in Egypt

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Type: Book
Website: http://books.google.com/books?...
Author: Salwa Sharawi Jumah
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Date published: Mon, Jul 16, 2007
Keywords: environmental law, reform, public interest, protection, land, pollution, externalities, lobbying, legislation, environmental protection, enforcement, access to legal defense
Country: Egypt
Scale of activity: National

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"This book is ... an example of how to study a specific problem (the environment in Egypt and how it relates to its politics and economics), how to define the parameters to achieve the goal of the study, and how to reach the goal.... Readers will trace the intellectual input of the author in every line of the book". -- From the foreword by Mostafa Kamal TolbaIn the first examination of environmental policy and policy making in Egypt, Salwa Sharawi Gomaa analyzes and explains the nature, development, and possible implications of environmental concern as a political issue. She explores the interactions between the Egyptian government, environmental non-government organizations (NGOs), the Green Party, and foreign donors and explains who makes environmental policy, how that policy is arrived at, and what its impact is.Of particular interest is the substantial amount of fieldwork and interviews on which Gomaa's study is based. Her conversations with government officials, NGO environmentalists, and officials from the international donor community provide insight and a concrete application of complex theoretical principles. Through personal contacts at every level of the process, she is able to show how the environment was put on the policy-making agenda, who saw it through the decision-making process, how the international donor community got involved, and how local organizations came to play a role.Unlike the grassroots environmentalism of the West, Egypt's environmental initiative originated with the state, following some prodding from the international community. Gomaa's description and analysis of how this process has advanced in a country rife with political and economicchallenges holds lessons for environmental advocates throughout the Third World.

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