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The number of severe and sometimes catastrophic disruptive events
has been rapidly increasing. Extreme weather events including
floods, wildfires, hurricanes, and other natural disasters have
become both more frequent and more severe, whilst events such as
the COVID-19 pandemic represent a global threat to public health
with huge economic effects that recovery packages tried to address.
These disruptive events, alone and in combination, have dramatic
consequences on nature, human life, and the economy, calling for
urgent action to mitigate their causes and adapt to their impacts.
In response to discourses of collapsology and end-of-growth
theories, this monograph offers an analytical approach to
developing legal responses that can help ensure the needs of
present and future generations can be met through energy systems,
infrastructure development, and natural resources management in
these times of disruption. 'Resilience' is, therefore, seen as a
common framework for the interpretation and development of energy,
infrastructure, and natural resources law. With a mix of thematic
chapters and case studies from multiple jurisdictions, Resilience
in Energy, Infrastructure, and Natural Resources Law maps and
assesses legal responses to disruptive nature-based events, and
examines possible legal pathways for more sustainable outcomes,
based on its engagement with this concept of 'resilience' and
social-ecological thinking.
Networks like cables and pipelines are essential for a functioning
energy market. This book provides a clear and insightful overview
of the legal challenges this poses in the modern world. The
construction and use of these networks depends on developments in
technology, policies, and legal regulation. Recently, the energy
sector has been faced with considerable challenges and changes.
Energy liberalisation and deregulation, and the fact that
traditional energy supplies like fossil fuels and large hydro
plants are increasingly located far from the area of demand has
drastically changed the energy landscape. The need for new sources
of energy supply can therefore be found all over the world. This
book investigates the challenges that face governments engaged in
this renewal, particularly since in many cases these networks are,
by necessity, international. The construction of new networks
always involves the application of planning and environmental laws,
and the complications these pose only increase as networks pass
through the territory of several different countries. This book
analyzes the evolution of this area from several angles, both
geographical and legal. The authors combine knowledge and expertise
from a variety of sources and backgrounds to present an invaluable
overview of the regulatory developments and perspectives that shape
the legal frameworks in which governments develop these networks,
and the way in which account must be taken of new sources of energy
by law-makers.
Energy justice has emerged over the last decade as a matter of
vital concern in energy law, which can be seen in the attention
directed to energy poverty, and the United Nations Sustainable
Development Goals. There are energy justice concerns in areas of
law as diverse as human rights, consumer protection, international
law and trade, and in many forms of regional and national energy
law and regulation. This edited collection explores in detail at
four kinds of energy justice. The first, distributive justice,
relates to the equitable distribution of the benefits and burdens
of energy activities, which is challenged by the existence of
people suffering from energy poverty. Secondly, procedural (or
participation) justice consists of the right of all communities to
participate in decision-making regarding energy projects and
policies that affect them. This dimension of energy justice often
includes procedural rights to information and access to courts.
Under the concept of reparation (or restorative) justice, the book
looks at even-handed enforcement of energy statutes and
regulations, as well as access to remedies when legal rights are
violated. Finally, the collection addresses social justice, with
the recognition that energy injustice cannot be separated from
other social ills, such as poverty and subordination based on race,
gender, or indigeneity. These issues feed into a wider conversation
about how we achieve a 'just' energy transition, as the world
confronts the urgent challenges of climate change.
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