AdelmanM. A. (1993). The Economics of Petroleum Supply: Papers by M.A. Adelman 1962-1993.Cambridge, MA.: The MIT Press.
2.
AndersonTerry L. ed., (1993). NAFTA and the Environment. San Francisco: Pacific Institute for Policy Analysis (jointly sponsored with the Fraser Institute and the Political Economy Research Center).
3.
BaileyRonald (1993). Eco-Scam: The False Prophets of Ecological Apocalypse. New York: St. Martins Press (A Cato Institute book).
4.
BallingRobert C.Jr. (1992). The Heated Debate: Greenhouse Predictions Versus Climate Reality. San Francisco: Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy.
5.
BarnettHarold J.MorseChandler (1963). Scarcity and Growth: The Economics of Natural Resource Availability. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press for Resources for the Future.
6.
BaumolWilliam J.OatesWallace E. (1988). The Theory of Environmental Policy, 2d ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
7.
BradleyRobert L.Jr. (1989). The Mirage of Oil Protection. Lanham: University Press of America. Cline, William R. (1992). The Economics of Global Warming. Washington: Institute for International Economics.
8.
ClawsonMarion (1983. The Federal Lands Revisited. Baltimore: Resources for the Future.
9.
CoaseRonald H. (1937). “The Nature of the Firm.” Economica NS 4 (4, November): 386-405. Reprinted in George J. Stigler and Kenneth E. Boulding, eds., (1952). Readings in Price Theory. 331-51. Homewood. Richard D. Irwin, Coase (1988), and Williamson and Winter 1991.
10.
CoaseRonald H. (1960). “The Problem of Social Costs.” Journal of Law and Economics3 (November): 1-44. Reprinted in Coase, 1988.
11.
CoaseRonald H. (1988). The Firm, the Market and the Law. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
12.
CummingsRonald G. (1969). “Some Extensions of the Economic Theory of Exhaustible Resources.” Western Economic Journal 7 (3) (September): 201-10.
13.
DasguptaP. S.HealG. M. (1979. Economic Theory and Exhaustible Resources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
14.
DornbuschRudigerPoterbaJames M. eds., (1991). Global Warming: Economic Policy Responses. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
15.
The Energy Journal (1991. Special Issue on Global Warming. Edited by Leonard Waverman. 12 (1).
16.
FisherIrving (1930. The Theory of Interest. New York: Macmillan.
17.
FranklandE. GeneSchoonmakerDonald (1992). Between Protest and Power: The Green Party in Germany. Boulder: Westview Press.
18.
GlobermanStevenWalkerMichael eds., (1993). Assessing NAFTA: A Trinational Analysis. Vancouver: The Fraser Institute.
19.
GoldsmithOliver S. (1974). “Market Allocation of Exhaustive Resources.” Journal of Political Economy 82 (5) (October November): 1035-40.
20.
GordonRichard L. (1966). “Conservation and the Theory of Exhaustible Resources.” Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science 32 (3) (August): 19-26.
21.
GordonRichard L. (1967). “A Reinterpretation of the Pure Theory of Exhaustion.” Journal of Political Economy 75 (3) (June): 274-86.
22.
GordonRichard L. (1978). “Price and Output Behavior of Exhaustible Resource Industries.” Materials and Society2 (3): 247-51.
23.
GordonRichard L. (1981a). An Economic Analysis of World Energy Problems. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
24.
GordonRichard L. (1981b). Federal Coal Leasing Policy, Competition in the Energy Industries. Washington: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research.
25.
GordonRichard L. (1984). “Access to Federal Lands for Profit Making Purposes—An Economic Overview.” Materials and Society8 (4): 699-718.
26.
GordonRichard L. (1985). “Levies on U.S. Coal Production.” The Energy Journal. (Special Tax Issue) 6: 241-54.
27.
GordonRichard L. (1987). “Coal in U. S. Land Policy.” in ByrneJohnRichDaniel, eds., Planning for Changing Energy Conditions. New Brunswick: Transaction Books, Inc., 139-72.
28.
GordonRichard L. (1988). “Federal Coal Leasing: An Analysis of the Economic Issues.” Discussion Paper EM88-01, Washington, D. C.: Energy and Materials Division, Resources for the Future, July.
29.
Gore, Senator A1 (sic) (1992). Earth in the Balance: Ecology and the Human Spirit. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
30.
GrayLewis C. (1914). “Rent under the Assumption of Exhaustibility.” Quarterly Journal of Economics. 28 (2, May): 466-489. Reprinted in Mason Gaffney, ed., (1967). Extractive Resources and Taxation. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 423-446.
31.
GrubbMichael (1990) Energy Policies and the Greenhouse Effect: Volume One: Policy Appraisal. Dartmouth: The Royal Institute of International Affairs.
32.
GrubbMichael (1991). Energy Policies and the Greenhouse Effect: Volume Two: Country Studies and Technical Options. Dartmouth: The Royal Institute of International Affairs.
33.
HealGeoffrey (1976). “The Relationship between Price and Extraction Cost for a Resource with a Backstop Technology.” Bell Journal of Economics 7 (2) (Autumn): 371-378.
34.
HerfindahlOrris C. (1967). “Depletion and Economic Theory.” in Mason Gaffney, ed., Extractive Resources and Taxation. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 63-90. Reprinted in Herfindahl (1974). 64-89.
35.
HerfindahlOrris C. (1974). Resource Economics: Selected Works. Edited by David B. Brooks. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, for Resources for the Future.
36.
HotellingHarold (1931). “The Economics of Exhaustible Resources.” Journal of Political Economy 39 (2) (April): 137-75.
37.
KneeseAllen V.SweeneyJames L. eds., (1993). Handbook of Natural Resource and Energy Economics. Vol. 3. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
38.
KoopmansTjalling C. (1974). “Ways of Looking at Future Economic Growth, Resource and Energy Use.” in Michael S. Macrakis, ed., Energy: Demand, Conservation, and Institutional Problems. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 3-15.
39.
KrepsDavid M. (1990. A Course in Microeconomic Theory. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
40.
LaveLester B.SeskinEugene P. (1977). Air Pollution and Human Health. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, for Resources for the Future.
41.
LeshyJohn D. (1987). The Mining Law: A Study in Perpetual Motion. Washington: Resources for the Future.
42.
LevhariDavidLiviatanNissan (1977). “Notes on Hotelling's Economics of Exhaustible Resources.” Canadian Journal of Economics 10 (2) (May): 177-192.
43.
LindzenRichard S. (1992). “Global Warming: The Origin and Nature of the Alleged Scientific Consensus.” Regulation 15 (2) (Spring): 87-98.
44.
LottJohn R.Jr. (1992). “Goring the U.S. Economy.” (Review of Senator AI Gore, Earth in the Balance: Ecology and the Human Spirit.). Regulation 15 (3) (Summer): 76-80.
45.
ManckeRichard B. (1974). The Failure of U.S. Energy Policy. New York, NY: Columbia University Press.
46.
ManckeRichard B. (1976). Squeaking By: U.S. Energy Policy Since the Embargo. New York, NY: Columbia University Press.
47.
MeadWalter J. (1985). Offshore Lands: Oil and Gas Leasing and Conservation on the Outer Continental Shelf. San Francisco: Pacific Institute for Public Policy Research.
48.
MichaelsPatrick J. (1992). Sound and Fury: The Science and Politics of Global Warming. Washington: The Cato Institute.
49.
ModianoEduardo M.ShapiroJeremy F. and (1980). “A Dynamic Optimization Model of Depletable Resources.” The Bell Journal of Economics 11 (1) (Spring): 212-36.
50.
MoorhouseJohn C. ed., (1986). Electric Power: Deregulation and the Public Interest. San Francisco, Calif.: Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy, 447-75.
51.
MuthJohn F. (1961). “Rational Expectations and the Theory of Price Movements.” Econometrica, 29:3 (July), p. 315-35. Reprinted in Robert E. Lucas, Jr., and Thomas J. Sargent, eds., 1981, Rational Expectations and Econometric Practice. Minneapolis, Minn.: University of Minnesota Press.
52.
NelsonRobert H. (1983. The Making of Federal Coal Policy. Durham: Duke University Press.
53.
PortneyPaul R., ed., (1990). Public Policies for Environmental Protection. Washington: Resources for the Future.
54.
RamsayWilliam (1979). Unpaid Costs of Electrical Energy: Health and Environmental Impacts from Coal and Nuclear Power. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press for Resources for the Future.
55.
Ray, Dixy Lee with Lou Guzzo(1990). Trashing the Planet: How Science Can Help Us Deal with Acid Rain, Depletion of the Ozone, and Nuclear Waste (Among Other Things). Washington: Regnery Gateway.
56.
Ray, Dixy Lee with Lou Guzzo (1993). Environmental Overkill: Whatever Happened to Common Sense? Washington: Regnery Gateway.
57.
SamuelsonPaul A. (1957). “Intertemporal Price Equilibrium: A Prologue to the Theory of Speculation.” Weltwirschafiliches Archiv 79 (2) (December): 181-219. Reprinted in Samuelson (1966). Vol. 2, 946-84.
58.
SamuelsonPaul A.(1966). The Collected Scientific Papers of Paul A. Samuelson.. Vol 1-2. Edited by Joseph E. Stiglitz. Cambridge, MA.: The MIT Press.
59.
SamuelsonPaul A.(1972). The Collected Scientific Papers of Paul A. Samuelson. Vol 3. Edited by Robert C. Merton. Cambridge, MA.: The MIT Press.
60.
SamuelsonPaul A.(1977). The Collected Scientific Papers of Paul A. Samuelson. Vol. 4. Edited by Hiroald Nagatani and Kate Crowley. Cambridge, MA.: The MIT Press.
61.
SamuelsonPaul A.(1986). The Collected Scientific Papers of Paul A. Samuelson. Vol. 5. Edited by Kate Crowley. Cambridge, MA.: The MIT Press.
62.
SchmalenseeRichard (1979. The Control of Natural Monopolies. Lexington, MA.: Lexington Books, D. C. Heath.
63.
ScottAnthony (1955). Natural Resources: The Economics of Conservation. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
64.
ScottAnthony (1967). “The Theory of the Mine under Conditions of Certainty.” in Mason Gaffney, ed., Extractive Resources and Taxation. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 25-62.
65.
SmithAdam1776, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. London: W. Strahan and T. Cadell. Reprints including the 1979 version in the Glasgow edition of the works and correspondence of Adam Smith. Oxford: Oxford University Press and Indianapolis: Liberty Classics.
66.
SolowRobert M. (1974). “The Economics of Resources or the Resources of Economics.” American Economic Review, papers and proceedings, 66 (2) (May): 1-14.
67.
SolowRobert M. (1992. An Almost Practical Step Toward Sustainability. Washington: Resources for the Future.
68.
SolowRobert M.WanFrederic Y. (1976). “Extraction Costs in the Theory of Exhaustible Resources.” Bell Journal of Economics 7 (2) (Autumn): 359-370.
69.
SweeneyJames L. (1993). “Economic Theory of Depletable Resources: An Introduction.” in Allen V. Kneese and James L. Sweeney, eds., Handbook, of Natural Resource and Energy Economics. Vol. 3. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
70.
TrockiLinda K. (1986). “An Analysis of the Role of Exploration in the Opening of New Iron and Copper Mines.” Unpublished Ph.D. thesis in Mineral Economics, The Pennsylvania State University.
71.
TrockiLinda K. (1990). “The Role of Exploration in Iron and Copper Supply.” Resources and Energy 12 (4) (December): 321-38.
72.
U.S. Congress (1990). Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office.
73.
U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment (1984). Acid Rain and Transported Air Pollutants: Implications for Public Policy. Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office.
74.
WatkinsG. C. (1992). “The Hotelling Principle: Autobahn or Cul de Sac?” The Energy Journal3 (1): 1-24.
75.
WilliamsonOliver E.WinterSidney G. eds., (1991). The Nature of the Firm: Origins, Evolution and Development. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
76.
ZimmermannErich W. (1964. Erich W. Zimmermann's Introduction to World Resources. Edited by Henry L. Hunker. New York: Harper &Row. (Updated and revised by the editor from Zimmermann's part I of World Resources and Industries.)
77.
ZimmermanMartin B. (1987). “The Evolution of Civilian Nuclear Power.” in Richard L. Gordon, Henry D. Jacoby, and Martin B. Zimmerman, eds., Energy: Markets and Regulation. Cambridge, MA.: The MIT Press, 83-106.