Stephanie Barral – Banking on Nature: The Market as a New Feature of Environmental Policies

Carbon markets, water quality credits, and mitigation banks are emerging forms of economic exchanges promoted and facilitated by governments as a new means to achieve environmental sustainability. Conservation banks are one of these: based on the
regulatory principle of “no net loss” of endangered species on the US territory, they consist in the production and exchange of “species credits” bought by economic developers whose activities impact ecological habitats and species. Neither restraining
economic development nor ignoring its negative aspects, environmental banks are trade-offs between economic growth and ecological conservation, cautiously regulated by State and federal agencies. Their expansion reflects a new relationship between environmental sciences, markets, financial instruments and public regulations that ought to be questioned: where does scientific work stand in the making of a market-based policy? Sociology of science provides insights showing how the macro-level of policy design allows for negotiations between scientific accuracy and economic efficiency at the micro-level of policy implementation.

Free and open to the public. 

SpeakerStephanie Barral is Research Fellow in Sociology at French National Institute on Agronomic Research and currently a Visiting Scholar at the Center on Organizational Innovation within the Department of Sociology at Columbia University

The Center for Science and Society
513 Fayerweather Hall, 1180 Amsterdam Avenue











When: Thu., Oct. 5, 2017 at 4:30 pm - 5:30 pm
Where: Columbia University
116th St. & Broadway
212-854-1754
Price: Free
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Carbon markets, water quality credits, and mitigation banks are emerging forms of economic exchanges promoted and facilitated by governments as a new means to achieve environmental sustainability. Conservation banks are one of these: based on the
regulatory principle of “no net loss” of endangered species on the US territory, they consist in the production and exchange of “species credits” bought by economic developers whose activities impact ecological habitats and species. Neither restraining
economic development nor ignoring its negative aspects, environmental banks are trade-offs between economic growth and ecological conservation, cautiously regulated by State and federal agencies. Their expansion reflects a new relationship between environmental sciences, markets, financial instruments and public regulations that ought to be questioned: where does scientific work stand in the making of a market-based policy? Sociology of science provides insights showing how the macro-level of policy design allows for negotiations between scientific accuracy and economic efficiency at the micro-level of policy implementation.

Free and open to the public. 

SpeakerStephanie Barral is Research Fellow in Sociology at French National Institute on Agronomic Research and currently a Visiting Scholar at the Center on Organizational Innovation within the Department of Sociology at Columbia University

The Center for Science and Society
513 Fayerweather Hall, 1180 Amsterdam Avenue

Buy tickets/get more info now