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Books > Law > Laws of other jurisdictions & general law > Private, property, family law > Property, real estate, land & tenancy law
This is the new paperback edition of the successful and well received hardback. The essays in this collection explore the links between the environment and human rights, and respond to the growing debate among activists, lawyers, academics and policy-makers on the legal status of environmental rights in both international and domestic law. The collection is an original and timely contribution to the existing literature on this subject, and offers a sustained analysis which addresses both the conceptual and practical problems of environmental rights.
This book offers the most up to date and comprehensive overview yet
published of the European Community legal mechanisms and rules
concerning the relationship between the establishment of the Single
European Market and the development of international European and
domestic environmental law. The author outlines the legal
mechanisms of the EC Treaty and shows how they seek to create a
balance between economic and environmental interests. Part one
elaborates on the EC Treaty's principles governing the relationship
bewteen the Single European Market and domestic environmental
policy instruments. Besides the rules governing the free movement
of goods (Articles 9, 12, 30-36), including the rules applicable to
environmental taces (Article 95), it gives an overview of the EC's
policies in the fields of green-state aids (Articles 92 etc) and
competeition policies. Part two looks in detail at the
harmonization of European environment related policy both for the
creation of the Common/Single European Market and the development
of a genuine European Environmental policy. It also looks closely
at related areas such as agriculture, transport, the common
commercial policy, external relations and the all important area of
international environmental treaties.
Courts, regulatory tribunals, and international bodies are often
seen as a last line of defense for environmental protection.
Governmental bodies at the national and provincial level enact and
enforce environmental law, and their decisions and actions are the
focus of public attention and debate. Court and tribunal decisions
may have significant effects on environmental outcomes, corporate
practices, and raise questions of how they may best be effectively
and efficiently enforced on an ongoing basis.Environment in the
Courtroom, Volume II examines major contemporary environmental
issues from an environmental law and policy perspective. Expanding
and building upon the concepts explored in Environment in the
Courtroom, it focuses on issues that have, or potentially could be,
the subject of judicial and regulatory tribunal processes and
decisions. This comprehensive work brings together leading
environmental law and policy specialists to address the protection
of the marine environment, issues in Canadian wildlife protection,
and the enforcement of greenhouse gas emissions regulation. Drawing
on a wide range of viewpoints, Environment in the Courtroom, Volume
II asks specific questions about and provides detailed examination
of Canada's international climate obligations, carbon pricing,
trading and emissions regulations in oil production, agriculture,
and international shipping, the protection of marine mammals and
the marine environment, Indigenous rights to protect and manage
wildlife, and much more. This is an essential book for students,
scholars, and practitioners of environmental law.
The Estates Gazette Law Reports are an indispensable reference for
property law practitioners researching and advising on all aspects
of landlord and tenant law, valuation, professional negligence,
conveyancing, real property, leasehold enfranchisement and
compensation. They comprise the law reports published in the
Estates Gazette plus new and original cases published for the first
time in EGLR. Each volume includes the most significant property
cases determined in any given year. Published over three volumes
each year and edited by HH Judge Hazel Marshall QC, they
conveniently summarize key current property cases.
An exploration of the relationship between possession and
legalization across Indonesia, and how people navigate
dispossession The old aphorism "possession is nine-tenths of the
law" is particularly relevant in Indonesia, which has seen a string
of regime changes and a shifting legal landscape for property
claims. Ordinary people struggle to legalize their possessions and
claim rights in competition with different branches of government,
as well as police, army, and private gangs. This book explores the
relationship between possession and legalization across Indonesia,
examining the imaginative and improvisational interpretations of
law by which Indonesians navigate dispossession.
Blighted is a powerful narrative about the decades-long decay and
remarkable two-year reinvention of Summerdale, an aging apartment
community located in one of Atlanta's grittiest corridors. From
burnt-out, mold-infested buildings to traumatized classrooms,
Blighted unfolds in the voices of ruthless drug dealers, phantom
tenants, fearless landlords, the working poor, educators, and
visionary local leaders. After purchasing the property from an
absentee overseas owner, Marjy Stagmeier and her partners
methodically tackled the crisis festering inside the gated 244-unit
apartment property. Two years of relentless work later, Stagmeier
reveals how the team that she led built community from chaos.
Through on-the-ground, in-the-moment interviews with a wide range
of stakeholders, Stagmeier demonstrates how marginalized housing
perpetuates intergenerational poverty and the collapse of nearby
public schools while showing the multifaceted challenges of
improving dire living conditions. Blighted offers a unique insider
perspective of the political, human, and economic challenges of
delivering equitable housing in a market fueled by inflationary
prices, insatiable demand, and competing and often dubious agendas.
Summerdale's success is a bright model of how affordable housing,
education, healthcare, and social capital can interconnect to build
vibrant, sustainable communities-affordable housing communities,
nearby schools, and the community at large. From there, kids,
families, working people, and neighborhoods can thrive.
This publication examines opportunities for pursuing pro-poor urban
resilience initiatives to reduce the increasing impacts of heat
stress faced by urban populations in Asia and the Pacific. Cities
in the region are increasingly at risk of heat waves, which are
expected to be more severe and persistent due to global warming.
The urban poor are especially vulnerable to heat stress and
associated health and productivity impacts as they often work
outdoors and tend to live in overcrowded housing without adequate
ventilation or cooling. The publication emphasizes that policies
and investments to address heat stress in cities need to be based
on long-term planning and actions at all scales: individual and
household, neighborhood, and city.
Non-Performing Loans, Non-Performing People tells the previously
untold stories of those living with mortgage debt in times of
precarity and explores how individualized indebtedness can unite
resistance in the struggle toward housing justice. The book builds
on several years of Melissa Garcia-Lamarca's engagement with
activist research in Barcelona's housing movement, in particular
with its most prominent collective, the Platform for
Mortgage-Affected People (PAH). What Garcia-Lamarca learned from
fellow activists and the movement in Barcelona pushed her to
rethink how lived experiences of indebtedness connect to larger
political- economic processes related to housing and debt. The book
is also inspired by feminist scholars who integrate the lens of
everyday life into explorations of contemporary political economy
and by anthropologists who connect macroprocesses to lived
experience. Distinctive in how it integrates a racialized,
gendered, and decolonial perspective, Garcia-Lamarca's research of
mortgaged lives in precarious times explores two principal
phenomena: first, how financial speculation is experienced in the
day-to-day and differentially embedded in the dynamics of (urban)
capital accumulation, and second, how collective action can unleash
the liberating possibility of indebtedness.
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