|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This cutting-edge book invites readers to rethink environmental law
and its critical role in ensuring a sustainable future for all.
Featuring international narratives, it demonstrates how
environmental law can be a potent tool to secure multi-actor
engagement, to improve ocean governance and to usher in effective
policy reforms. Contributors illustrate narratives of successful
historic and contemporary developments in environmental law,
setting out innovative approaches to issues such as environmental
enforcement and monitoring, effective forest protection, climate
adaptation and disaster risk reduction. Drawing out key lessons and
practices for effective reform, this insightful book highlights
opportunities by which we can respond to the acute environmental
challenges facing the planet. Bringing together perspectives from
both established and up-and-coming scholars, this book will be of
interest to academics and students of environmental law, as well as
researchers of environmental management. Policy makers and
practitioners will also find inspiration in fruitful stories of
environmental law and policy reform. Contributors include: T.N.
Adimazoya, T. Daya-Winterbottom, R.-L. Eisma-Osorio, D. Estrin, A.
Foerster, L.L. Heng, E.A. Kirk, Y. Lin, R.V. Percival, F.-K.
Phillips, A. Pickering, N. Robinson, J. Steinberg-Albin
This cutting-edge book invites readers to rethink environmental law
and its critical role in ensuring a sustainable future for all.
Featuring international narratives, it demonstrates how
environmental law can be a potent tool to secure multi-actor
engagement, to improve ocean governance and to usher in effective
policy reforms. Contributors illustrate narratives of successful
historic and contemporary developments in environmental law,
setting out innovative approaches to issues such as environmental
enforcement and monitoring, effective forest protection, climate
adaptation and disaster risk reduction. Drawing out key lessons and
practices for effective reform, this insightful book highlights
opportunities by which we can respond to the acute environmental
challenges facing the planet. Bringing together perspectives from
both established and up-and-coming scholars, this book will be of
interest to academics and students of environmental law, as well as
researchers of environmental management. Policy makers and
practitioners will also find inspiration in fruitful stories of
environmental law and policy reform. Contributors include: T.N.
Adimazoya, T. Daya-Winterbottom, R.-L. Eisma-Osorio, D. Estrin, A.
Foerster, L.L. Heng, E.A. Kirk, Y. Lin, R.V. Percival, F.-K.
Phillips, A. Pickering, N. Robinson, J. Steinberg-Albin
When do local communities benefit from natural resource extraction?
In some regions of natural resource extraction, firms provide goods
and services to local communities, but in others, protest may
occur, leading to government regulatory or repressive intervention.
Mines, Communities, and States explores these outcomes in Africa,
where natural resource extraction is a particularly important
source of revenue for states with otherwise limited capacity.
Blending a mixture of methodological approaches, including formal
modelling, structured case comparison, and quantitative geo-spatial
empirical analysis, it argues that local populations are important
actors in extractive regions because they have the potential to
impose political and economic costs on the state as well as the
extractive firm. Jessica Steinberg argues that governments, in
turn, must assess the economic benefits of extraction and the value
of political support in the region, and make a calculation about
how to manage trade-offs that might arise between these
alternatives.
When do local communities benefit from natural resource extraction?
In some regions of natural resource extraction, firms provide goods
and services to local communities, but in others, protest may
occur, leading to government regulatory or repressive intervention.
Mines, Communities, and States explores these outcomes in Africa,
where natural resource extraction is a particularly important
source of revenue for states with otherwise limited capacity.
Blending a mixture of methodological approaches, including formal
modelling, structured case comparison, and quantitative geo-spatial
empirical analysis, it argues that local populations are important
actors in extractive regions because they have the potential to
impose political and economic costs on the state as well as the
extractive firm. Jessica Steinberg argues that governments, in
turn, must assess the economic benefits of extraction and the value
of political support in the region, and make a calculation about
how to manage trade-offs that might arise between these
alternatives.
|
You may like...
AI vs Humans
Michael W. Eysenck, Christine Eysenck
Paperback
R816
Discovery Miles 8 160
|