J. Brehm et Jt. Hamilton, NONCOMPLIANCE IN ENVIRONMENTAL REPORTING - ARE VIOLATORS IGNORANT, OREVASIVE, OF THE LAW, American journal of political science, 40(2), 1996, pp. 444-477
Theory: An increasingly common regulatory tool is one that delegates t
he duty to provide information to the regulated entities, creating new
problems in principal-agency models of regulation. Hypotheses: Failur
e to comply with regulations mandating information provision is as muc
h due to ignorance of reporting requirements as to willful evasion. Me
thods: A modified detection controlled estimation model for coverage,
violation, and detection of facility compliance with the EPA's Toxics
Release Inventory, estimated for facilities in Minnesota in 1991. Resu
lts: Violation is better understood by those variables associated with
the likelihood that the firm is ignorant of TRI reporting requirement
s, than by those associated with evasion. Firms in violation tend to b
e small facilities, releasing or transferring small amounts of toxins
to the environment.