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Sustainable development is now widely accepted as a political
objective in the UK and elsewhere but to what extent has the UK's
rhetoric on sustainable development become a reality? The aim of
this book is to critically examine the UK's approach to promoting
and delivering sustainable development. It begins by providing a
detailed account of UK law on sustainable development by reviewing
the various policy, institutional and legal mechanisms used by the
UK since the 1980s and by devolved administrations since devolution
took effect in 1999. Progress has been slow, too slow and,
according to the scientists, time is running out. To deal with this
lack of progress, the book advocates increasing the status of
ecological sustainability and sustainable development through the
introduction of a wide range of legal mechanisms which would compel
the change needed. The book calls for ecological sustainability, or
respecting the Earth's environmental limits, to be afforded the
status of legal principle and argues that with ecological
sustainability at its normative core, sustainable development could
provide an effective framework for decision making and governance.
It argues that to support this approach and ensure consistency, the
time has come for sustainable development to receive explicit legal
backing. Over and above its symbolic and educational value,
legislation can impose mandatory rules on policymakers and decision
makers, often with meaningful consequences both inside and outside
the courtroom. To this end, the book contributes to the theory on
sustainable development governance by suggesting three possible
legislative approaches for such intervention. The volume concludes
that while a lack of leadership on sustainable development may
hinder the introduction of these innovations, once introduced,
these innovations would equally provide much needed support for
effective leadership towards a sustainable future. Andrea Ross is a
Reader in the School of Law at the University of Dundee and has
taught and researched in the areas of public and environmental law
for over 18 years. Before becoming an academic she qualified as a
Barrister and Solicitor in Ontario, Canada. An Earthscan from
Routledge book.
Sustainable development is now widely accepted as a political
objective in the UK and elsewhere but to what extent has the UK's
rhetoric on sustainable development become a reality? The aim of
this book is to critically examine the UK's approach to promoting
and delivering sustainable development. It begins by providing a
detailed account of UK law on sustainable development by reviewing
the various policy, institutional and legal mechanisms used by the
UK since the 1980s and by devolved administrations since devolution
took effect in 1999. Progress has been slow, too slow and,
according to the scientists, time is running out. To deal with this
lack of progress, the book advocates increasing the status of
ecological sustainability and sustainable development through the
introduction of a wide range of legal mechanisms which would compel
the change needed. The book calls for ecological sustainability, or
respecting the Earth's environmental limits, to be afforded the
status of legal principle and argues that with ecological
sustainability at its normative core, sustainable development could
provide an effective framework for decision making and governance.
It argues that to support this approach and ensure consistency, the
time has come for sustainable development to receive explicit legal
backing. Over and above its symbolic and educational value,
legislation can impose mandatory rules on policymakers and decision
makers, often with meaningful consequences both inside and outside
the courtroom. To this end, the book contributes to the theory on
sustainable development governance by suggesting three possible
legislative approaches for such intervention. The volume concludes
that while a lack of leadership on sustainable development may
hinder the introduction of these innovations, once introduced,
these innovations would equally provide much needed support for
effective leadership towards a sustainable future. Andrea Ross is a
Reader in the School of Law at the University of Dundee and has
taught and researched in the areas of public and environmental law
for over 18 years. Before becoming an academic she qualified as a
Barrister and Solicitor in Ontario, Canada. An Earthscan from
Routledge book.
Adopted at birth, Andrea Ross grew up inhabiting two ecosystems:
one was her tangible, adoptive family, the other her birth family,
whose mysterious landscape was hidden from her. In this
coming-of-age memoir, Ross narrates how in her early twenties,
while working as a ranger in Grand Canyon National Park, she
embarked on a journey to discover where she came from and,
ultimately, who she was. After many missteps and dead ends, Ross
uncovered her heartbreaking and inspiring origin story and began
navigating the complicated turns of reuniting with her birth
parents and their new families. Through backcountry travel in the
American West, she also came to understand her place in the world,
realizing that her true identity lay not in a choice between
adopted or biological parents, but in an expansion of the concept
of family.
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