The future of international environmental law

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Bibliographic Information

The future of international environmental law

edited by David Leary and Balakrishna Pisupati

United Nations University, c2010

  • : pbk

Available at  / 14 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Contents of Works

  • Climate change and pollution : addressing intersecting threats to oceans, coasts and small island developing states / Ann Powers
  • Biodiversity / Susan Shearing
  • Implementation of environmental legal regimes at regional level : the case of the Mediterranean Sea / Tullio Scovazzi
  • Non-lawyers and legal regimes : public participation for ecologically sustainable development / Donna Craig and Michael Jeffery
  • Human rights and the environment / Gudmundur Alfredsson
  • Development and the future of climate change law / Michael B. Gerrard and Dionysia-Theodora Avgerinopoulou
  • A new ocean to govern : drawing on lessons from marine management to govern the emerging Arctic Ocean / Timo Koivurova and Sébastien Duyck
  • Moving beyond the tragedy of the global commons : the Grotian legacy and the future of sustainable management of the biodiversity of the high seas / Rosemary Rayfuse
  • Emerging technologies : nanotechnology / David Leary and Balakrishna Pisupati
  • Legal frameworks for emerging technologies : bioenergy / Richard L. Ottinger and Victor M. Tafur
  • Synthetic biology and synthetic genomics / Michelle S. Garfinkel and Robert M. Friedman

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Through a collection essays by leading scholars in international environmental law from around the world, this book explores the future of international environmental law in a world of ever worsening environmental crises. It examines the success stories and the failures of international environmental law and argues that future responses to global environmental crisis will be more about good environmental governance rather than just more treaties and laws. Environmental governance in future will need to accommodate the needs and aspirations of peoples from developed and developing countries alike and will have to be based on decisions and actions by a vast range of actors and stakeholders and not just the nation state that has traditionally dominated environmental diplomacy to date. In future this also suggests a need to be cognizant of the close links to other areas of international law including human rights.

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