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Reasonable creatures: rights and rationalities in valuing the countryside
Authors:Philip Lowe  Judy Clark  Graham Cox
Institution:1. Centre for Rural Economy , University of Newcastle upon Tyne , Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, UK;2. Department of Geography , University College London , 26 Bedford Way, London, WC1H 0AP, UK;3. School of Social Sciences , University of Bath , Claverton Down, Bath, BA2 7AY, UK
Abstract:Debate on the economic valuation of the countryside is typically polarized between absolutist critics who would deny it any valid role and equally fervid proponents who see its techniques as the only way of integrating the environment into policy making. Such debate is structured by conflicting notions of rights, responsibilities and values, rather than by consideration of the role of technique in practical policy‐making. This paper attempts to take the debate forward and begins by examining the ways in which rights, responsibilities and values have been historically created. The techniques of economic valuation rest on particular conceptions of these, making them irreducibly political, and at the same time their results are often used to justify political decisions. Yet the proper role of technique ought to be to explore options. Provided that the sort of clarification that economic valuation offers is understood, it may, along with other types of technique, be used to open up the decision making process.
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