Produktbild: The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law

The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law

349,99 €

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

12.10.2021

Herausgeber

Lavanya Rajamani + weitere

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

1232

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17,5/5,7 cm

Gewicht

1730 g

Auflage

2nd edition

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-884915-5

Beschreibung

Rezension

While Earth's natural systems deteriorate, environmental laws are applied in dynamic, contradictory, but always compelling ways. Stakeholders urgently seek guidance about how such laws will fulfill the UN Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, or to cope with impacts of climate disruption, toxic chemical pollution, or biodiversity loss. This masterfully revised edition fills this need. Rajamani and Peel have orchestrated succinct yet comprehensive briefings by leading experts, elucidating how many actors are reshaping international law across sectors. This new Handbook makes clear how environmental law today governs all relationships, whether commercial transactions, geo-political security, or access to food and natural resources. It belongs on every lawyers' desk. Nicholas A. Robinson, Executive Governor, International Council of Environmental Law, Kerlin Distinguished Professor of Environmental Law Emeritus, Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

12.10.2021

Herausgeber

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

1232

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17,5/5,7 cm

Gewicht

1730 g

Auflage

2nd edition

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-884915-5

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law
    • 1: Lavanya Rajamani and Jacqueline Peel: International Environmental Law: Changing Context, Emerging Trends and Expanding Frontiers

    • Part I - Context

    • 2: John S. Dryzek: Discourses

    • 3: Peter H. Sand: Origin and History

    • 4: Jeffrey L. Dunoff: Multi-level and Polycentric Governance

    • 5: Margaret A. Young: Fragmentation

    • 6: David M. Driesen: Instrument Choice

    • 7: Duncan French and Lynda Collins: Scholarship

    • 8: Elizabeth Fisher: Legal Imagination and Teaching

    • Part II - Analytical Approaches

    • 9: Peter Lawrence: International Relations Theory

    • 10: Michael Faure: Economics

    • 11: Sumudu Atapattu: Global South Approaches

    • 12: Rowena Maguire: Feminist Approaches

    • 13: Alexander Gillespie: Ethical Considerations

    • 14: Cormac Cullinan: Earth Jurisprudence

    • 15: Sam Johnston: The Role of Science

    • Part III - Conceptual Pillars

    • 16: Jutta BrunnÃ(c)e: Harm Prevention

    • 17: Jorge E. Viñuales: Sustainable Development

    • 18: Jacqueline Peel: Precaution

    • 19: Philippe Cullet: Differentiation

    • 20: Werner Scholtz: Equity

    • 21: Jonas Ebbesson: Public Participation

    • 22: Akiho Shibata: Good Faith

    • Part IV - Normative Development

    • 23: Pierre-Marie Dupuy, Ginevra Le Moli, and Jorge E. Viñuales: Customary International Law and the Environment

    • 24: Daniel Bodansky: Multilateral Environmental Treaty Making

    • 25: Alan Boyle: Soft Law

    • 26: Joanne Scott: Private and Quasi-Private Standards

    • 27: Cymie R. Payne: Judicial Development

    • Part V - Subject matter

    • 28: Phoebe Okowa: Transboundary Air Pollution

    • 29: Lavanya Rajamani and Jacob Werksman: Climate Change

    • 30: Salman M. A. Salman: Freshwater Resources

    • 31: Adriana Fabra: Marine Environment: Pollution and Fisheries

    • 32: Annecoos Wiersema: Wildlife

    • 33: David A. Wirth and Noah M. Sachs: Hazardous Substances and Activities

    • 34: Beatriz Martinez Romera: Aviation and Maritime Transport

    • Part VI - Actors

    • 35: Thilo Marauhn: The State

    • 36: Ellen Hey: International Institutions

    • 37: Sandrine Maljean-Dubois: Regional Organisations: The European Union

    • 38: J. Michael Angstadt and Michele Betsill: Non-State Actors

    • 39: Hari M. Osofsky: Subnational Actors

    • 40: Peter M. Haas: Epistemic Communities

    • 41: Benjamin J. Richardson and Beate SjÃ¥fjell: Business and Industry

    • 42: Jacinta Ruru: Indigenous Peoples

    • Part VII - Inter-linkages with other regimes

    • 43: Harro van Asselt: Trade

    • 44: Kate Miles: Investment

    • 45: John H. Knox: Human Rights

    • 46: Walter Kÿlin: Migration

    • 47: Robert R.M. Verchick and Paul Rink: Disaster

    • 48: Lisa Benjamin: Intellectual Property

    • 49: Catherine Redgwell: Energy

    • 50: Carl Bruch, Cymie R. Payne, and Britta Sjöstedt: Armed Conflict

    • Part VIII - Compliance, Implementation and Effectiveness

    • 51: Ronald B. Mitchell: Compliance Theory

    • 52: Tom Sparks and Anne Peters: Transparency Procedures

    • 53: Michael A. Mehling: Market Mechanisms

    • 54: Laurence Boisson de Chazournes: Financial Assistance

    • 55: Shawkat Alam: Technology Assistance and Transfers

    • 56: Meinhard Doelle: Non-Compliance Procedures

    • 57: Steinar Andresen: Effectiveness

    • 58: Christina Voigt: International Responsibility and Liability

    • 59: Alice Palmer: National Implementation

    • 60: Natalie Klein: International Environmental Law Disputes before International Courts and Tribunals

    • Part IX - International Environmental Law in National/Regional Courts

    • 61: Louis J. KotzÃ(c): Africa

    • 62: Jolene S. Lin: China

    • 63: Eloise Scotford: EU/UK

    • 64: Shibani Ghosh: India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan

    • 65: Natasha Affolder: North America

    • 66: Tim Stephens: Oceania

    • 67: Maria Antonia Tigre: South America