Greening International InstitutionsRoutledge, 2014 M04 8 - 364 pages First Published in 2009. This title contains a diverse collection of pieces from which the reader can draw an understanding of the shape and function of the institutions discussed within, the scope of their activities, and the niche they occupy in the larger system. Werksman reveals a pattern that organizations grow and contract erratically and organically in response to competing demands, concerns and resources. This volume aims to raise questions as to whether the demands of sustainable development require a more fundamental push against the inertia of institutional culture. |
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Page ix
... Natural Resources Division of the US Department of Justice, and worked at UNEP's Environmental Law Unit. She is an Adjunct Professor at the George Washington University and University of Maryland law schools. Her particular interests ...
... Natural Resources Division of the US Department of Justice, and worked at UNEP's Environmental Law Unit. She is an Adjunct Professor at the George Washington University and University of Maryland law schools. Her particular interests ...
Page xi
... natural resources. Large parts of UNCED's agenda for 'sustainable development' were also entrusted to existing and new international institutions. 50 years after San Francisco and five years after Rio, the authors of the chapters that ...
... natural resources. Large parts of UNCED's agenda for 'sustainable development' were also entrusted to existing and new international institutions. 50 years after San Francisco and five years after Rio, the authors of the chapters that ...
Page 9
... natural systems to sustain human use.54 Natural resources are not to be wasted but to be used with restraint.55 Activities which are likely to cause irreversible damage to nature shall be avoided.56 Activities which may disturb nature ...
... natural systems to sustain human use.54 Natural resources are not to be wasted but to be used with restraint.55 Activities which are likely to cause irreversible damage to nature shall be avoided.56 Activities which may disturb nature ...
Page 12
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Page 13
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Contents
Trade
| 69 |
Finance | 129 |
Regional Institutions | 179 |
Avoiding and Settling Disputes | 217 |
Environmental NGOs and International Institutions | 249 |
Appendices | 309 |
Index | 326 |
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Common terms and phrases
action activities adopted agencies Agenda 21 areas Article 100A Assembly assessment Bank’s Basel Convention biodiversity Chapter Climate Change Convention Commission on Sustainable commitments Committee Community’s concern Conference conservation cooperation coordination Court decision-making decisions developing countries dispute settlement Earth Summit economic effective enforcement ensure environment and development environmental agreements environmental issues environmental policy environmental problems environmental protection established European Forum GATT Global Environment Facility global environmental governments groups implementation of Agenda integration intergovernmental international environmental law international institutions international law mandate MEAs measures mechanisms meetings Member Montreal Protocol multilateral NAFTA National Environmental Funds natural resources NEFs negotiations NGOs non-governmental organizations objectives Ozone Panel participation Parties principle procedures programmes promote proposal regimes regional relevant Report Resolution role Secretariat Security Council session supra sustainable development technical Trade and Environment transboundary Treaty UNCED UNCTAD UNDP UNEP United Nations system World Bank