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This book represents a first attempt to investigate the relations
between Law and Agroecology. There is a need to adopt a
transdisciplinary approach to multifunctional agriculture in order
to integrate the agroecological paradigm in legal regulation. This
does not require a super-law that hierarchically purports to
incorporate and supplant the existing legal fields; rather, it
calls for the creation of a trans-law that progressively works to
coordinate interlegalities between different legal fields,
respecting their autonomy but emphasizing their common historical
roots in rus in the process. Rus, the rural phenomenon as a whole,
reflects the plurality and interdependence of different complex
systems based jointly on the land as a central point of reference.
"Rural" is more than "agricultural": if agriculture is understood
traditionally as an activity aimed at exploiting the land for the
production of material goods for use, consumption and private
exchange, rurality marks the reintegration of agriculture into a
broader sphere, one that is not only economic, but also social and
cultural; not only material, but also ideal, relational,
historical, and symbolic; and not only private, but also public. In
approaching rus, the natural and social sciences first became
specialized, multiplied, and compartmentalized in a plurality of
first-order disciplines; later, they began a process of integration
into Agroecology as a second-order, multi-perspective and shared
research platform. Today, Agroecology is a transdiscipline that
integrates other fields of knowledge into the concept of
agroecosystems viewed as socio-ecological systems. However, the law
seems to still be stuck in the first stage. Following a
reductionist approach, law has deconstructed and shattered the
universe of rus into countless, disjointed legal elementary
particles, multiplying the planes of analysis and, in particular,
keeping Agricultural Law and Environmental Law two separate fields.
This book expands upon research into the protection of foreign
investments, which is currently an intensively studied area of
international law. At the same time, it also examines environmental
protection, as well as general areas of debate in international
law, including fragmentation, self-contained regimes, the role of
interpretation and of principles, and theories of indeterminacy. In
this detailed and concise monograph, Saverio Di Benedetto examines
the problematic impact of environmental issues on international
investment law from the perspective of arbitral dispute settlement
and treaty-making. Current debates concerning 'self-contained'
regimes and international law form the background to this
investigation. By extrapolating insights from the vast and
heterogeneous amount of available practice, the book provides an
order to the two spheres of values, from internal and fragmentary
approaches to systemic forms of integration. Finally, it outlines a
possible method for reconciling investor rights and environmental
concerns, which is centred around the model of exceptions and
highlights the role of legal principles. This book is essential
reading for academics of international investment law and related
matters, with useful research material for both practitioners and
policy-makers. Moreover, the innovative approach of this book makes
it appropriate for adoption in specialized undergraduate and
postgraduate courses in international economic law. Contents:
Preface Part I: Foreign Investments versus the Environment 1.
Introduction: The Social and Legal Context 2. International
Investment Law and Environmental Protection 3. Theoretical
Approaches to International Investment Law 4. Applicable Law and
Methods of Interpretation Part II: Integrating Environmental
Protection into International Investment Law 5. Internal Arguments:
From Ordinary Meanings to Derogatory Logic 6. Systemic Approaches
7. Exceptional Models 8. Environmental Exceptions, Indeterminacy
and Legal Principles Bibliography Index
This book represents a first attempt to investigate the relations
between Law and Agroecology. There is a need to adopt a
transdisciplinary approach to multifunctional agriculture in order
to integrate the agroecological paradigm in legal regulation. This
does not require a super-law that hierarchically purports to
incorporate and supplant the existing legal fields; rather, it
calls for the creation of a trans-law that progressively works to
coordinate interlegalities between different legal fields,
respecting their autonomy but emphasizing their common historical
roots in rus in the process. Rus, the rural phenomenon as a whole,
reflects the plurality and interdependence of different complex
systems based jointly on the land as a central point of reference.
“Rural” is more than “agricultural”: if agriculture is
understood traditionally as an activity aimed at exploiting the
land for the production of material goods for use, consumption and
private exchange, rurality marks the reintegration of agriculture
into a broader sphere, one that is not only economic, but also
social and cultural; not only material, but also ideal, relational,
historical, and symbolic; and not only private, but also public. In
approaching rus, the natural and social sciences first became
specialized, multiplied, and compartmentalized in a plurality of
first-order disciplines; later, they began a process of integration
into Agroecology as a second-order, multi-perspective and shared
research platform. Today, Agroecology is a transdiscipline that
integrates other fields of knowledge into the concept of
agroecosystems viewed as socio-ecological systems. However, the law
seems to still be stuck in the first stage. Following a
reductionist approach, law has deconstructed and shattered the
universe of rus into countless, disjointed legal elementary
particles, multiplying the planes of analysis and, in particular,
keeping Agricultural Law and Environmental Law two separate fields.
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