Enforcing environmental standards : economic mechanisms as viable means?
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Enforcing environmental standards : economic mechanisms as viable means?
(Beiträge zum ausländischen öffentlichen Recht und Völkerrecht, Bd. 125)
Springer, c1996
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume contains the papers from the interdisciplinary symposium "Enforcing Environmental Standards: Econonic Mechanisms as Viable Means?", organized by the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law. The symposium centred around the necessity to introduce to international law, characterized by a lack of central enforcement mechanisms, new mechanisms to enforce international standards for the protection of the environment. Modern international environmental law has established several economic mechanisms to inforce international standards for the protection of the environment, ranging from trade restrictions, through economic incentives, to an economically-induced interstate co-operation.
Table of Contents
From the contents: The Protection of Environmental Interests of the World Community Through International Environmental Law.- The International Environmental Law of Cooperation.- The GATT/WTO Dispute Settlement Process: Can it Reconcile Trade Rules and Environmental Needs?- Trade Restrictions as Viable Means of Enforcing Compliance with International Environment Law: An Economic Assessment.- The Case of the Convention on Trade in Endangered Species.- Trade Restrictions as Means of Enforcing Compliance with International Environmental Law.- The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change: On the Road towards Sustainable Development.- New Approaches to Achieve Sustainable Management of Tropical Timber.- The Implementation of the Basel Convention in German National Environmental Law as an Example for the Use of the Economic Mechanisms.- From Theory to Practice: The Second Phase of the NAFTA Environmental Regime.- Ecolabelling: Consumer Right-to-Know or Restrictive Business Practice?- Fostering Recycling and World Trade Rules: Incompatible?
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