9.7: Sources
- Page ID
- 41941
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Figure 9.1.1: Dorothy Peyton Gray Transportation Library and Archive at the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
Figure 9.2.1: Photograph by Jonathan Van Dyke, UCLA.
Figure 9.2.2: California Air Resources Board. 2008. Climate Change Scoping Plan. Table 2. Retrieved from https://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/scopingplan/ document/scopingplandocument.htm.
Figure 9.2.3: California Air Resources Board. https://www.arb.ca.gov.
Figure 9.2.4: California Secretary of State. https://www.sos.ca.gov/ elections/prior-elections/statewide-election-results/general-electionnovember-2-2010/statement-vote/. Map by Jesus Contreras, UC Santa Cruz.
Figure 9.2.5: Photograph by Ron V. Ocampo, The Bottom Line.
Figure 9.3.1: California Air Resources Board. https://ww2.arb.ca.gov/our-work/ programs/california-climate-investments/cci-funded-programs.
Figure 9.4.1: US Energy Information Administration. https://www.eia.gov/ electricity/.
Figure 9.4.2: Next 10. 2018. 2018 California Green Innovation Index. https:// www.next10.org/2018-gii.
Figure 9.4.3: Photograph by Hajhouse from Wikimedia Commons.
Figure 9.5.1: California Air Resources Board. 2019. Regional Plan Targets. https://ww2.arb.ca.gov/our-work/prog...le-communities -program/regional-plan-targets. Map by Jesus Contreras, UC Santa Cruz.
Figure 9.5.2: California Air Resources Board. 2018. 2018 Progress Report. California’s Sustainable Communities and Climate Protection Act. Figure 1. https://ww2.arb.ca.gov/sites/default...nal2018Report_ SB150_112618_02_Report.pdf.
Figure 9.6.1: Next 10. 2018. 2018 California Green Innovation Index. https:// www.next10.org/2018-gii.
Sources for the Text
9.1 Air Quality as the Genesis for Climate Policy
Gonzalez, G. A. 2005. The Politics of Air Pollution: Urban Growth, Ecological Modernization, and Symbolic Inclusion. State University of New York Press, Albany, NY.
National Research Council. 2006. State and Federal Standards for Mobile-Source Emissions. National Academies Press, Washington, DC. https://doi.org/ 10.17226/11586.
US Department of Energy. 2019. Residential Energy Consumption Survey. DOE. https://www.eia.gov/consumption/residential/.
US Energy Information Administration. 2009. Household Energy Use in California. EIA. Retrieved from http://www.eia.gov/consumption/ residential/reports/2009/state_briefs/pdf/ca.pdf.
9.2 California’s Climate Legislation
Biber, E. 2013. Cultivating a green political landscape: lessons for climate change policy from the defeat of California’s Proposition 23. Vanderbilt Law Review 66(2), 399–462.
California Air Resources Board. 2008. Climate Change Scoping Plan. CARB. Retrieved from https://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/scopingplan/document/ scopingplandocument.htm.
California Air Resources Board. 2014. First Update to the Climate Change Scoping Plan. CARB, 135 pp. http://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/scopingplan/2013 _update/first_update_climate_change_scoping_plan.pdf.
Goulder, L. H., Jacobsen, M. R., and van Benthem, A. A. 2012. Unintended consequences from nested state and federal regulations: the case of the Pavley greenhouse-gas-per-mile limits. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 63(2), 187–207.
Hanemann, M. 2008. California’s new greenhouse gas laws. Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 2(1), 114–129.
Holian, M. J., and Kahn, M. E. 2015. Household demand for low carbon public policies: evidence from California. Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists 2(2), 205–234.
Pavley, F. 2010. California’s battle for clean cars. In Climate Change Science and Policy, Schneider, S. H., et al. (eds.). Island Press, Washington, DC.
Sperling, D., and Eggert, A. 2014. California’s climate and energy policy for transportation. Energy Strategy Reviews 5, 88–94.
Sperling, D., and Yeh, S. 2010. Toward a global low carbon fuel standard. Transport Policy 17, 47–49.
Vogel, D. 2018. California Greenin’: How the Golden State Became an Environmental Leader. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.
9.3 The Cap-and-Trade Experiment
California Air Resources Board. 2019. Annual Report to the Legislature on California Climate Investments Using Cap-and-Trade Auction Proceeds. http://www.caclimateinvestments.ca.gov/annual-report.
Carlson, A. 2013. Regulatory capacity and state environmental leadership: California’s climate policy. Fordham Environmental Law Review 24, 63–86.
Cullenward, D., and Coghlan, A. 2016. Structural oversupply and credibility in California’s carbon market. Electricity Journal 29, 7–14.
Cushing, L., et al. 2018. Carbon trading, co-pollutants, and environmental equity: evidence from California’s cap-and-trade program (2011–2015). PLOS Medicine 15(7), e1002604.
Fowlie, M., Holland, S. P., and Mansur, E. T. 2012. What do emissions markets deliver and to whom? Evidence from Southern California’s NOx trading program. American Economic Review 102(2), 965–993. https://doi .org/10.1257/aer.102.2.965.
Grainger, C., and Ruangmas, T. 2018. Who wins from emissions trading? Evidence from California. Environmental and Resource Economics 71, 703–727. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10640-017-0180-1.
Legislative Analyst’s Office. 2017. Cap-and-Trade Extension: Issues for Legislative Oversight. Legislative Analyst’s Office, Sacramento, CA.
Lejano, R. P., and Hirose, R. 2005. Testing the assumptions behind emissions trading in non-market goods: the RECLAIM program in Southern California. Environmental Science & Policy 8(4), 367–377.
Schmalensee, R., and Stavins, R. N. 2017. The design of environmental markets: what have we learned from experience with cap and trade? Oxford Review of Economic Policy 33(4), 572–588.
Vogel, D. 2018. California Greenin’: How the Golden State Became an Environmental Leader. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.
9.4 Energy
Armstrong, J. 2019. Modeling effective local government climate policies that exceed state targets. Energy Policy 132, 15–26.
Asmus, P. 2009. Introduction to Energy in California. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA.
Glover, M. 2015, September 9. SMUD approves solar power array on 62 acres of Rancho Seco site. Sacramento Bee.
Next 10. 2018. 2018 California Green Innovation Index. https://www.next10.org/ 2018-gii.
US Energy Information Administration. 2019. State Electricity Profiles. https:// www.eia.gov/electricity/state/.
9.5 The Land Use Problem
Barbour, E. 2016. Evaluating sustainability planning under California’s Senate Bill 375. Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board 2568, 17–25.
Barbour, E., and Deakin, E. 2012. Smart growth planning for climate protection. Journal of the American Planning Association 78(1), 70–86.
California Air Resources Board. 2018. 2018 Progress Report. California’s Sustainable Communities and Climate Protection Act. CARB. https://ww2.arb.ca.gov/sites/default...150_112618_02_ Report.pdf.
California Air Resources Board. 2019. Regional Plan Targets. https://ww2.arb .ca.gov/our-work/programs/sustainable-communities-program/regional -plan-targets.
9.6 Conclusions and Outlook
Cragg, M. I., et al. 2013. Carbon geography: the political economy of congressional support for legislation intended to mitigate greenhouse gas production. Economic Inquiry 51(2), 1640–1650.
Glaeser, E. L., and Kahn, M. E. 2010. The greenness of cities: carbon dioxide emissions and urban development. Journal of Urban Economics 67(3), 404–418.
Next 10. 2018. 2018 California Green Innovation Index. https://www.next10.org/ 2018-gii.
Tausanovitch, C., and Warshaw, C. 2014. Representation in municipal government. American Political Science Review 108(03), 605–641.
Vogel, D. 2018. California Greenin’: How the Golden State Became an Environmental Leader. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.

