This article describes the evolution of EPR policies in the United States, focusing on the role of states as policy actors. SPECIAL FEATURE ON EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITYI have read and accept the Wiley Online Library Terms and Conditions of UseCleaner Production Tools and Environmental Management Practices, Strategic take-back programs when consumers have heterogeneous environmental preferences, A review of sustainable e-waste generation and management: Present and future perspectives, Persistent Tobacco Smoke Residue in Multiunit Housing: Legacy of Permissive Indoor Smoking Policies and Challenges in the Implementation of Smoking Bans, EPR system participants’ behavior: Evolutionary game and strategy simulation, Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE): Flows, Quantities, and Management—A Global Scenario, Electronic Waste Management and Treatment Technology, Commentary health risks from climate fix: The downside of energy storage batteries, Critical factors for environmental regulation change management: evidence from an extended producer responsibility case study, Design Implications of Extended Producer Responsibility for Durable Products, Corporate Social Responsibility Practices in the U.S.: Using Reverse Supply Chain Network Design and Optimization Considering Carbon Cost, Review on evolution of municipal solid waste management in India: practices, challenges and policy implications, A Case Discussion on Market‐Based Extended Producer Responsibility: The Minnesota Electronics Recycling Act, Drivers, barriers and enablers to end-of-life management of solar photovoltaic and battery energy storage systems: A systematic literature review, A review of sustainable mining and resource management: Transitioning from the life cycle of the mine to the life cycle of the mineral, Environmental impact of voluntary extended producer responsibility: The case of carpet recycling, Design Implications of Extended Producer Responsibility for Durable Products, Analysis of Driving Factors for Extended Producer Responsibility by Using Interpretative Structure Modelling (ISM) and Analytic Network Process (ANP), Unsustainable Wind Turbine Blade Disposal Practices in the United States, NEW SOLUTIONS: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy, Biohydrometallurgical Processing of Metallic Components of E-Wastes, Charging up Battery Recycling Policies: Extended Producer Responsibility for Single‐Use Batteries in the European Union, Canada, and the United States, Extended producer responsibility policy in Portugal: a strategy towards improving waste management performance, Material Flow Analysis of Carbon Nanotube Lithium-Ion Batteries Used in Portable Computers, An examination of governance within extended producer responsibility policy regimes in North America,
Prior to working at HBS, she taught elementary school in underserved communities in Massachusetts and California.

Official news from Harvard covering innovation in teaching, learning, and research. The role of BEI Faculty Chair allows Mike to strengthen institutional support for faculty colleagues working on various business and environment topics, and to identify opportunities to increase the impact of their work.Professor Michael Toffel has been interested in how companies can reduce their environmental impacts since the early 1990s. Previously she was Executive Director of the Regulatory Policy Program at Harvard Kennedy School and Associate Director of the HKS Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government. She coordinates with resources across the school to strengthen research and teaching about business and the environment, connect students with career opportunities, and engage with alumni and other managers and policymakers on topics such as climate change, sustainable agribusiness, and effective governance. Her research focuses on black sexual politics, black feminist theories, black motherhood, and intersectionality and the debates around it. If you do not receive an email within 10 minutes, your email address may not be registered,
Ph.D., African American Studies, Harvard University.

clubs and alumni connections on campus and beyond. Her research examines private and public roles in environmental protection, with an emphasis on innovative, voluntary, and self-regulatory approaches.

Several state initiatives suggest a more promising future for EPR.Please note: The publisher is not responsible for the content or functionality of any supporting information supplied by the authors.

Lynn has led several successful finance projects that brought together the private and public sectors, large financial institutions, and multilateral organizations. 1, 2014; U of Penn, Inst for Law & Econ Research Paper No.

In previous roles at HBS she wrote case studies on impact investing and contributed to the Problem Solving book. Coglianese, Cary and Nash, Jennifer, Performance Track's Postmortem: Lessons from the Rise and Fall of EPA's 'Flagship' Voluntary Program (2014).

We catalyze research and share insights with business leaders.

For their part, federal lawmakers have not embraced EPR policies except to remove some barriers to state‐level initiatives. She coordinates with resources across the school to strengthen research and teaching about business and the environment, connect students with career opportunities, and engage with alumni and other managers and policymakers on topics such as climate change, sustainable agribusiness, and effective governance. Jennifer Nash . Soon after graduating Yale with an MBA and a Master’s degree from its environmental school, Toffel became the director of environment, health, and safety at a conglomerate in Southeast Asia.

Daniel E. Walters . Jennifer works with faculty to establish and implement the BEI’s strategy and program portfolio. Previously Lynn was a VP in the Infrastructure and Energy group at Citigroup and a Director at the William J. Clinton Foundation’s Clinton Climate Initiative.

38, Pg. Tell us your goals and challenges. Her focus continues to be on the intersection of finance and climate change, as it applies across multiple sectors and geographies.Elise is the coordinator of the Business and Environment Initiative.

At HBS, Elise has experience managing MBA courses, coordinating faculty & doctoral recruiting, and overseeing events. Her focus continues to be on the intersection of finance and climate change, as it applies across multiple sectors and geographies.Lynn leads BEI’s efforts on alumni engagement, case marketing, curriculum development, and other aspects of faculty engagement.

University of Pennsylvania Law School . in MBA classrooms.