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Adopting a holistic and multidisciplinary approach, this expertly
crafted book comprehensively maps out the complex
multi-jurisdictional legal landscape pertaining to the EU’s
circular energy system. Offering in-depth critical analysis, it
identifies several areas of law and policy that require further
scholarly inquiry to ensure the creation of an effective policy
framework which can facilitate the move from a linear to a circular
energy system. In three thematic sections, the expert contributors
first examine the interactions between EU law and policy for waste,
agriculture, food and forestry. Focus is then drawn to how, when,
and by whom the energy sources created from biowaste can become
part of the EU’s energy mix. A range of legal instruments that
impact the financing of the circular energy system through
taxation, EU financing, and state aid are also considered. The book
concludes by reflecting on inefficiencies and ineffectiveness
caused by these interactions of legal and policy areas related to
the circular energy system. This insightful and progressive book
will be of great interest to practitioners and policymakers looking
to better understand the legal complexities of implementing a
circular energy system. It will also prove an essential read for
scholars and students interested in environmental law, energy law,
European law, and affordable and clean energy studies.
This book provides a broad understanding of whether law plays a
role in influencing patterns of sustainable consumption and, if so,
how. Bringing together legal scholars from the Global South and the
Global North, it examines these questions in the context of
national, transnational and international law, within single and
plural legal systems, and across a range of sector-specific issue
areas. The chapters identify how traditional legal disciplines
(e.g. constitutional law, consumer law, public procurement,
international public law), sector-related regulation (e.g. energy,
water, waste), and legal rules in specific areas (e.g.
eco-labelling and packing) engage with the concept of sustainable
consumption. A number of the contributions describe this
relationship by isolating a national legal system, while others
approach it from the vantage point of legal pluralism, exploring
the conflicts and convergences of rules between multiple
international treaties (or guidelines) and those between the rules
of international and transnational law (or both) vis-a-vis national
legal systems. While sustainable consumption is recognised as an
important field of interdisciplinary research linking virtually all
social science disciplines, legal scholarship, in contrast, has
neglected the importance of the field of sustainable consumption to
the law. This book fills the gap.
This book provides a broad understanding of whether law plays a
role in influencing patterns of sustainable consumption and, if so,
how. Bringing together legal scholars from the Global South and the
Global North, it examines these questions in the context of
national, transnational and international law, within single and
plural legal systems, and across a range of sector-specific issue
areas. The chapters identify how traditional legal disciplines
(e.g. constitutional law, consumer law, public procurement,
international public law), sector-related regulation (e.g. energy,
water, waste), and legal rules in specific areas (e.g.
eco-labelling and packing) engage with the concept of sustainable
consumption. A number of the contributions describe this
relationship by isolating a national legal system, while others
approach it from the vantage point of legal pluralism, exploring
the conflicts and convergences of rules between multiple
international treaties (or guidelines) and those between the rules
of international and transnational law (or both) vis-a-vis national
legal systems. While sustainable consumption is recognised as an
important field of interdisciplinary research linking virtually all
social science disciplines, legal scholarship, in contrast, has
neglected the importance of the field of sustainable consumption to
the law. This book fills the gap.
This book is written in honour of Hans-W. Micklitz for his jubilee
70th birthday and the closure of his twelve-year term as the Chair
for Economic Law at the European University Institute (EUI).
Hans-W. Micklitz has gained international recognition for
dedicating his extensive and fruitful career to diverse areas of
law: European Economic Law, European Private Law, National and
European Consumer Law, Legal Theory, theories of Private Law and
Social Justice. This book is a product of the collaborative
endeavors of its contributors, who all have a special connection
with Hans W. Micklitz as his doctoral supervisees or research
assistants. The collection of twenty chapters is to be read as the
influence of Hans's dialogues in the early stage of the academic
career of thirty-one young legal scholars. The volume is divided
into three sections devoted to subjects that have received Hans's
attention while at the EUI: EU Consumer Law (part I); European
Private Law and Access Justice (part II); the CJEU between the
individual citizen and the Member States (part III).
This book is written in honour of Hans-W. Micklitz for his jubilee
70th birthday and the closure of his twelve-year term as the Chair
for Economic Law at the European University Institute (EUI).
Hans-W. Micklitz has gained international recognition for
dedicating his extensive and fruitful career to diverse areas of
law: European Economic Law, European Private Law, National and
European Consumer Law, Legal Theory, theories of Private Law and
Social Justice. This book is a product of the collaborative
endeavors of its contributors, who all have a special connection
with Hans W. Micklitz as his doctoral supervisees or research
assistants. The collection of twenty chapters is to be read as the
influence of Hans's dialogues in the early stage of the academic
career of thirty-one young legal scholars. The volume is divided
into three sections devoted to subjects that have received Hans's
attention while at the EUI: EU Consumer Law (part I); European
Private Law and Access Justice (part II); the CJEU between the
individual citizen and the Member States (part III).
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