Essays in Environmental Management and Economics: Public Health, Risk and Strategic Environmental Assessment
Abstract
Abstract
Current large-scale environmental and climate change leads to the emergence of new and potentially dramatic risks for individuals and societies. The welfare costs associated with these risks largely depend on our ability to take them into account in decision-making and adapt to new circumstances. By analysing how people perceive and manage risks individually and collectively, this thesis aims to improve the understanding of how these environmentally related welfare costs may be reduced.
Papers 1–3 focus on risk perceptions and decision-making at the individual level and concern how
people perceive and manage risks in relation to the increasing incidence of Lyme borreliosis (LB) and
tick-borne encephalitis (TBE). The empirical analysis is based on a survey with 1500 randomly selected
respondents in Sweden. Papers 4 and 5 focus on risk assessment and decision-making at the collective
level and concern how strategic environmental assessments are used to manage environmental risks in low- and middle-income countries. The empirical analysis is based on interviews with stakeholders involved in environmental assessments of policy reforms.
Paper 1: Learning to Live with Ticks? The Role of Exposure and Risk Perceptions in Protective
Behaviour Against Tick-Borne Diseases
We analyse the role of risk perceptions and exposure for five protective measures against tick bites
and the related diseases TBE and LB. We find a strong positive association between exposure and
checking the skin for ticks, but no or weak associations between exposure and the use of protective clothing, tucking trousers into socks, the use of repellent or avoidance of tall grass in areas with ticks.
Paper 2: Valuation When Baselines Are Changing: Tick-borne Disease Risk and Recreational Choice
We estimate willingness to pay to avoid recreational areas with ticks, LB and TBE risk. In northern
Sweden, where the presence of ticks is relatively new, the willingness to pay to avoid risk is significantly higher than in southern Sweden, where ticks are endemic. We also find that TBE-vaccinated
respondents have a lower willingness to pay. These differences in willingness to pay for risk reduction
between groups with different baseline risk should be taken into account when estimating welfare costs of the spread of disease vectors to new areas due to environmental and climate change.
Paper 3: The Willingness to Pay for Vaccination against Tick-Borne Encephalitis and Implications for
Public Health Policy: Evidence from Sweden
We estimate the TBE-vaccination rate to 33% in TBE-risk areas and analyse the role of vaccine price,
income and other factors influencing the demand for vaccination. We project that a subsidy making
TBE vaccines free of charge could increase the vaccination rate in TBE risk areas to around 78%, with a larger effect on low-income households, whose current vaccination rate is only 15% in risk areas.
Paper 4: Greening Growth through Strategic Environmental Assessment of Sector Reforms
Based on an evaluation of a World Bank programme, we analyse whether strategic environmental
assessments can contribute to greening sector reforms in low- and middle-income countries. We find that the institutional context plays a crucial role for the performance of environmental assessments
and suggest that increased attention to institutional aspects could improve effectiveness.
Paper 5: Challenges to Institutionalising Strategic Environmental Assessment: the Case of Vietnam
We develop a conceptual framework for analysing constraints to the institutionalisation of strategic
environmental assessments at four different institutional levels. The framework is tested in an
empirical analysis of the environmental assessment system in Vietnam.
Parts of work
Paper 1: Slunge, D., and Boman, A. (2017). Learning to Live with Ticks? The Role of Exposure and Risk Perceptions in Protective Behaviour Against Tick-Borne Diseases Paper 2: Slunge, D., Sterner, T., and Adamowicz, W. (2017). Valuation When Baselines Are Changing: Tick-borne Disease Risk and Recreational Choice Paper 3: Slunge, D. (2015). The Willingness to Pay for Vaccination against Tick-Borne Encephalitis and Implications for Public Health Policy: Evidence from Sweden. PloS one, 10(12), e0143875. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0143875 Paper 4: Slunge, D., and Loayza, F. (2012). Greening Growth through Strategic Environmental Assessment of Sector Reforms Public Administration and Development, 32(3), 245-261. doi:10.1002/pad.1623 Paper 5: Slunge, D., and Tran, T. T. H. (2014). Challenges to institutionalizing strategic environmental assessment: The case of Vietnam. Environmental Impact Assessment Review. doi:10.1016/j.eiar.2014.05.005
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
University of Gothenburg. School of Economics, Business and Law ; Göteborgs universitet. Handelshögskolan
Institution
Department of Economics ; Institutionen för nationalekonomi med statistik
Disputation
10:15, C-G Salen Handelshögskolan, Göteborgs universitet
Date of defence
2017-09-08
daniel.slunge@gu.se
Date
2017-08-18Author
Slunge, Daniel
Keywords
risk, risk perception, public health, strategic environmental assessment, institutions, governance, willingness to pay, protective behaviour, vector-borne diseases, ticks, TBE, tick-borne encephalitis, Lyme borreliosis, climate change
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-88199-22-5 (PDF)
978-91-88199-21-8 (Printed)
Series/Report no.
Studies in Environmental Management and Economics
3
Language
eng