Abstract: | Welcome to the fifth issue of the Review of Environmental Economicsand Policy, which once again includes articles, a symposium,and a set of features. In the first of two articles in this issue, Geoffrey Heal reviewswhat we have learned about the economics of global climate changeand related public policy from the extensive literature thathas emerged in response to the controversial Stern Review ofthe Economics of Climate Change. Heal provides his own perspectiveon the Stern Review (which was the focus of a symposium in ourWinter 2008 issue) as well as his views on how the recent debateaffects the economic case for action on |