Originally published in 1980, this book takes as case studies various policies arising from the Control of Pollution Act 1974 and traces their implementation and impact. The information about disposal of toxic waste on land, bathing water quality, noise abatement zones and industrial air pollution offers fruitful areas of investigation, highlighting different aspects of environmental pollution policy and its wider implications as well as illustrating vital components of the implication process, including enforcement and discretion. Many of these issues are as pertinent now as when the book was first published. Drawing on this evidence to establish some of the features central to public policy generally, the book will be of use to historians of public and environmental policy and those teaching and researching it.
Part 1: The Implementation Problem
1. Analysing Public Policies
2.
Analysing Pollution Policy
3. Creating Pollution Policy: The Control of
Pollution Act 1974 Part 2: Investigating Pollution Policy
4. Toxic Waste
Disposal
5. The Bathing Water Directive
6. Noise Abatement Zones
7.
Identifying Industrial Air Pollution Part 3: The Process of Implementation
8.
The Framework for Implementation
9. Instruments for Policy
10. The
Enforcement of Policy
11. Improving Pollution Control
12. Conclusion:
Effective Public Policy.
Ruth Levitt (19502016) began her working life with the NHS, and became an expert on the then new community health councils established in 1974 to provide a voice for patients. Ruth published a widely used textbook, The Reorganised National Health Service (1976), which went to six editions. Her next move was to an academic appointment in public policy at Bristol University. Then, inspired by the formation of the Social Democratic party, she moved into politics, working for David Owen and standing, unsuccessfully, for Nuneaton in the 1983 general election.
After a spell in social science publishing with Routledge, her interest turned towards art and she took a PhD at UCL on the 17th-century Dutch painter Albert Cuyp, learning Dutch on the way. Deciding to combine art with an interest in management, she took an MBA from the Open University. This led her into her next career management consultancy for a range of arts organisations including the V&A and Ashmolean museums.
In later years she returned to research. As a visiting academic at Kings College London she worked with Bill Solesbury on projects including the role of policy tsars. She also worked on Jewish history.