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Linking Science and Technology to Society's Environmental Goals (1996)
Policy Division (PD)

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. "E Respondents to Call for Comments." Linking Science and Technology to Society's Environmental Goals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 1996.

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Linking Science and Technology to Society's Environmental Goals

Michael Toman

Resources for the Future

Washington, D.C.

Linda K. Trocki

Program Director

Los Alamos National Laboratory

Energy Technology Programs Office

Los Alamos, N.M.

R. Rhodes Trussell

Montgomery Watson, Inc.

Pasadena, Calif.

Francis Y. Tsang

Global Technologies, Inc.

Idaho Falls, Idaho

Jane Hughes Turnbull

Electric Power Research Institute

Palo Alto, Calif.

James M. Vail

Senior Science Advisor

American Petroleum Institute

Washington, D.C.

William R. Waldrop

Tellico Village

Loudon, Tenn.

Philip G. Watanabe

Blaire, Wash.

Mike Way

Executive Director

Colorado Alliance for Environmental Education

Denver, Colo.

Stephen R. Weil

Bechtel Hanford, Inc.

Richland, Wash.

Conrad G. Welling

Ocean Minerals Co.

Menlo Park, Calif.

Iddo Wernick

Research Associate

Program for the Human Environment

The Rockefeller University

New York, N.Y.

Roy F. Weston

Roy F. Weston, Inc.

West Chester, Pa.

Grace Wever

Vice President

Council of Great Lakes Industries

Rochester, N.Y.

W.R. Wiley

Senior Vice President

Science and Technology Policy

Battelle Memorial Institute

Richland, Wash.

Jane Willeboordse

NGO/Government Liaison

International Solar Energy Society

Columbia, Md.

Julian Wolpert

Professor of Geography, Public Affairs and Urban Planning

Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs

Princeton University

Princeton, N.J.

Page
496
Front Matter (R1-R12)
Part I: Committee Report (1-2)
Summary (3-14)
Society's Environmental Goals (15-26)
Use Social Science and Risk Assessment to Make Better Societal Choices (27-36)
Focus on Monitoring to Build Better Understanding of Our Ecological Systems (37-50)
Reduce the Adverse Impacts of Chemicals in the Environment (51-60)
Develop Environmental Options for the Energy System (61-72)
Use a Systems Engineering and Ecological Approach to Reduce Resource Use (73-80)
Improve Understanding of the Relationship Between Population and Consumption as a Means to Reducing the Environmental Impacts of Population Growth (81-86)
Set Environmental Goals Via Rates and Directions of Change (87-90)
Bibliography (91-94)
Part II: Commissioned Papers (95-96)
National Environmental Goals: Implementing the Laws, Visions of the Future, and Research (97-134)
Measurement of Environmental Quality in the United States (135-178)
Attitudes Toward the Environment Twenty-Five Years After Earth Day (179-190)
Environmental Goals and Science Policy: A Review of Selected Countries (191-242)
Can States Make a Market for Environmental Goals? (243-280)
Setting Environmental Goals: The View from Industry. A Review of Practices from the 1960s (281-326)
Status of Ecological Knowledge Related to Policy Decision-Making Needs in the Area of (327-344)
The Federal Budget and Environmental Priorities (345-398)
Part III: Keynote Addresses and Presentations (399-400)
D. James Baker, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (401-406)
Thomas Grumbly, U.S. Department of Energy (407-412)
Barry Gold, U.S. Department of the Interior (413-418)
Harlan Watson, House Committee on Science (419-422)
David Garman, Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources (423-430)
John Wise and Peter Truitt, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (431-436)
Judith Espinosa and Peggy Duxbury, President's Council on (437-448)
Gilbert S. Omenn, University of Washington (449-462)
Part IV: Appendixes (463-464)
A Committee Member and Staff Biographical Information (465-470)
B Forum Agenda (471-474)
C Forum Participants (475-482)
D Summary of Responses to Call for Comments (483-488)
E Respondents to Call for Comments (489-496)
F Summary of Breakout-Group Discussions (497-500)
G Detecting Changes in Time and Space (501-504)
H Contents and Executive Summary of a Report of the Carnegie Commission on Science, Technology, and Government (505-516)
Index (517-530)