|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
The central idea animating environmental impact assessment (EIA) is
that decisions affecting the environment should be made through a
comprehensive evaluation of predicted impacts. Notwithstanding
their evaluative mandate, EIA processes do not impose specific
environmental standards, but rely on the creation of open,
participatory and information rich decision-making settings to
bring about environmentally benign outcomes. In light of this
tension between process and substance, Neil Craik assesses whether
EIA, as a method of implementing international environmental law,
is a sound policy strategy, and how international EIA commitments
structure transnational interactions in order to influence
decisions affecting the international environment. Through a
comprehensive description of international EIA commitments and
their implementation with domestic and transnational governance
structures, and drawing on specific examples of transnational EIA
processes, the author examines how international EIA commitments
can facilitate interest coordination, and provide opportunities for
persuasion and for the internalisation of international
environmental norms.
This book examines liability for environmental harm in Antarctic,
deep seabed, and high seas commons areas, highlighting a unique set
of legal questions: Who has standing to claim environmental harms
in global commons ecosystems? How should questions of causation and
liability be addressed where harm arises from a variety of
activities by state and non-state actors? What kinds of harm should
be compensable in global commons ecosystems, which are remote and
characterized by high levels of scientific uncertainty? How can
practical concerns such as ensuring adequate funds for compensation
be resolved? This book provides the first in-depth examination and
evaluation of current rules and possible avenues for future legal
developments in this area of increasing importance for states,
international organizations, commercial actors, and legal and
governance scholars. This title is part of the Flip it Open
Programme and may also be available Open Access. Check our website
Cambridge Core for details.
While no supranational institutions exist to govern climate change
in North America, a system of cooperation among a diverse range of
actors and institutions is currently emerging. Given the range of
interests that influence climate policy across political
boundaries, can these distinct parts be integrated into a coherent,
and ultimately resilient system of regional climate cooperation?
Climate Change Policy in North America is the first book to examine
how cooperation respecting climate change can emerge within
decentralized governance arrangements. Leading scholars from a
variety of disciplines provide in-depth case studies of climate
cooperation initiatives - such as emissions trading, energy
cooperation, climate finance, carbon accounting and international
trade - as well as analysis of the institutional, political, and
economic conditions that influence climate policy integration.
The central idea animating environmental impact assessment (EIA) is
that decisions affecting the environment should be made through a
comprehensive evaluation of predicted impacts. Notwithstanding
their evaluative mandate, EIA processes do not impose specific
environmental standards, but rely on the creation of open,
participatory and information rich decision-making settings to
bring about environmentally benign outcomes. In light of this
tension between process and substance, Neil Craik assesses whether
EIA, as a method of implementing international environmental law,
is a sound policy strategy, and how international EIA commitments
structure transnational interactions in order to influence
decisions affecting the international environment. Through a
comprehensive description of international EIA commitments and
their implementation with domestic and transnational governance
structures, and drawing on specific examples of transnational EIA
processes, the author examines how international EIA commitments
can facilitate interest coordination, and provide opportunities for
persuasion and for the internalisation of international
environmental norms.
While no supranational institutions exist to govern climate change
in North America, a system of cooperation among a diverse range of
actors and institutions is currently emerging. Given the range of
interests that influence climate policy across political
boundaries, can these distinct parts be integrated into a coherent,
and ultimately resilient system of regional climate cooperation?
Climate Change Policy in North America is the first book to examine
how cooperation respecting climate change can emerge within
decentralized governance arrangements. Leading scholars from a
variety of disciplines provide in-depth case studies of climate
cooperation initiatives - such as emissions trading, energy
cooperation, climate finance, carbon accounting and international
trade - as well as analysis of the institutional, political, and
economic conditions that influence climate policy integration.
The challenges to global order posed by rapid environmental change
are increasingly recognized as defining features of our time. In
this groundbreaking work, the concept of innovation is deployed to
explore normative and institutional responses in international law
to such environmental change by addressing two fundamental themes:
first, whether law can foresee, prevent, and adapt to environmental
transformations; and second, whether international legal responses
to social, economic, and technological innovation can appropriately
reflect the evolving needs of contemporary societies at national
and international scales. Using a range of case studies, the
contributions to this collection track innovation - descriptively,
normatively, and as a process in and of itself - to explain
international environmental law's functionality in the
Anthropocene. This book should be read by anyone interested in the
critical intersection of environmental and international law.
|
|