An Ecological Approach to International Law: Responding to the Challenges of Climate ChangeRoutledge, 2008 M01 28 - 464 pages An Ecological Approach to International Law shows that international environmental law is fundamentally flawed and not equipped to meet global challenges. The book examines international legal responses to global climate change by analysing key concepts such as the doctrine of state sovereignty, the law on state responsibility, environmental rights and common heritage of mankind. |
From inside the book
Page ix
... 212 212 220 221 222 222 224 230 231 232 237 238 240 242 243 244 244 258 258 260 260 262 269 277 280 285 286 287 288 289 291 292 292 293 293 295 297 297 299 6.6.2 Protection of the global environment 304 6.7 Implementation of ix CONTENTS.
... 212 212 220 221 222 222 224 230 231 232 237 238 240 242 243 244 244 258 258 260 260 262 269 277 280 285 286 287 288 289 291 292 292 293 293 295 297 297 299 6.6.2 Protection of the global environment 304 6.7 Implementation of ix CONTENTS.
Page x
... Implementation of Common Heritage of Life: a global environmental treaty 305 6.8 Conclusion 309 7 Rio: an opportunity lost? 323 7.1 Introduction 323 7.2 The 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development 323 7.3 ...
... Implementation of Common Heritage of Life: a global environmental treaty 305 6.8 Conclusion 309 7 Rio: an opportunity lost? 323 7.1 Introduction 323 7.2 The 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development 323 7.3 ...
Page 2
... Implementation and innovation are, therefore, equally important for international law's success. In negotiating and adopting the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change2 the international community has accepted the ...
... Implementation and innovation are, therefore, equally important for international law's success. In negotiating and adopting the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change2 the international community has accepted the ...
Page 3
... implement effective responses, a full appreciation of the deficiencies of existing principles and concepts is critical to the further development of new international environmental law. International law typically develops only slowly ...
... implement effective responses, a full appreciation of the deficiencies of existing principles and concepts is critical to the further development of new international environmental law. International law typically develops only slowly ...
Page 5
... implementing it into a global environmental treaty. The Chinese term for 'crisis' is wei-ji. It is composed of the characters for 'danger' and 'opportunity'.10 In the context of an international legal response the 'danger' is in ...
... implementing it into a global environmental treaty. The Chinese term for 'crisis' is wei-ji. It is composed of the characters for 'danger' and 'opportunity'.10 In the context of an international legal response the 'danger' is in ...
Contents
1 | |
9 | |
3 State responsibility for environmental harm | 61 |
4 International liability for injurious consequences arising out of acts not prohibited by international law | 144 |
5 Human rights and the environment | 196 |
6 The common heritage of mankind | 258 |
an opportunity lost? | 323 |
8 Conclusion | 349 |
Appendices | 353 |
Bibliography | 407 |
Index | 431 |
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Common terms and phrases
action activities anthropocentric approach areas beyond national Article Barboza’s biosphere Bosselmann Brown Weiss Brownlie carbon dioxide cause chapter Climate Change Convention co-operation common heritage common interest concept concern Conference consequences considered context customary international law damage developing countries discussion documents draft Earth Charter earth’s ecocentric ecological economic ecosystems emissions emphasis added enforcement environmental harm environmental human right environmental protection environmental right example existing future global atmosphere global commons global environment greenhouse effect greenhouse gases humanity’s Ibid impact implementation intergenerational equity international environmental law IPCC IPCC WGI issue Kiss liability limited ment Montreal Protocol national jurisdiction Nuclear Tests obligation to prevent ozone Pardo Parties pollution Principle 21 problems property rights Protocol Quentin-Baxter’s recognise referred regime relevant responsibility Rio Declaration ronmental scientific sea-bed sovereign sovereignty specific state’s Stockholm Declaration suggested territory tion tional topic Trail Smelter transboundary UNCED United Nations Zealand