Record ID | marc_loc_updates/v39.i41.records.utf8:11464400:5494 |
Source | Library of Congress |
Download Link | /show-records/marc_loc_updates/v39.i41.records.utf8:11464400:5494?format=raw |
LEADER: 05494cam a22003138a 4500
001 2011040524
003 DLC
005 20111005135734.0
008 110927s2012 enk 100 0 eng
010 $a 2011040524
020 $a9781107019423 (hardback)
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dDLC
042 $apcc
050 00 $aK3584.8$b.E578 2012
082 00 $a344.04/6$223
084 $aLAW051000$2bisacsh
245 00 $aEnvironmental discourses in public and international law /$cedited by Brad Jessup and Kim Rubenstein.
260 $aCambridge ;$aNew York :$bCambridge University Press,$c2012.
263 $a1202
300 $ap. cm.
490 0 $aConnecting international law with public law
520 $a"This collection of essays examines the development and application of environmental laws and the relationship between public laws and international law. Notions of good governance, transparency and fairness in decision-making are analysed within the area of the law perceived as having the greatest potential to address today's global environmental concerns. International trends, such as free trade and environmental markets, are also observed to be infiltrating national laws. Together, the essays illustrate the idea that in the context of environmental problems being dynamic and environmental changes appearing suddenly, laws become difficult to design and effect. Typically, they are also devised within a conflicted setting. It is in this changeable and discordant context that environmental discourses such as precaution, justice, risk, equity, security, citizenship and markets contribute to legal responses, present legal opportunities or hinder progress"--$cProvided by publisher.
520 $a"The world is talking, pondering, and strategising about the environment. Ever more of the environment has been identified, publicly contemplated, or designated for despoliation and resource extraction. Remote and 'wild' places like the rugged Australian Kimberley and the far reaches of North America are now subject to advanced plans for fossil fuel extraction. Environmental disasters, including fires, floods, cyclones, earthquakes and tsunami, and schemes to alleviate or prevent future human suffering from catastrophe, have occupied governmental and organisational attention. Meanwhile, concerns about environmental degradation, and in particular human-induced climate change, dominate Western media and national and international politics, and are connecting communities through conversation and localised action. The nature, breadth and extent of global responses to climate change are also points of contention between the developing and developed worlds"--$cProvided by publisher.
505 8 $aMachine generated contents note: Introduction: using environmental discourses to traverse public and international law Brad Jessup and Kim Rubenstein; Part I. Theories and Rights as Discourses in Environmental Law: 1. Justice for future generations: environment discourses, international law and climate change Peter Lawrence; 2. The journey of environmental justice through public and international law Brad Jessup; 3. The political discourse of land stewardship reframed as a statutory duty Mark Shepheard and Paul Martin; 4. Dephysicalisation and entitlement: legal and cultural discourses of place as property Nicole Graham; Part II. Discourses in Environmental Decisions: 5. Perspectives on discourse in international environmental law: expert knowledge and challenges to deliberative democracy Jaye Ellis; 6. Getting to yes: structuring and disciplining arguments for and against transgenic agricultural products in European Union authorisations Bettina Lange; 7. Nuclear narratives, environmental discourse and UK energy policy and legislation, 1970-2008 Elizabeth Rough; Part III. Environmental Discourses in Legal Institutions: 8. International courts and sustainable development: using old tools to shape a new discourse Tim Stephens; 9. The discourse of environmental security in the ASEAN context Kheng-Lian Koh; 10. Public participation in transboundary environmental impact assessment: closing the gap between international and public law? Simon Marsden; Part IV. Discourses in Climate Law: 11. Climate change: limits discourses at the interface of international law and environmental law Lee Godden; 12. The national interest or good international citizenship? Australia and its approach to international and public climate law Owen Cordes-Holland; 13. The Asia-Pacific partnership: a deepened market liberal model for the international climate regime? Jeffrey Mcgee and Ros Taplin; 14. Global gazing: viewing markets through the lens of emissions trading discourses Sanja Bogojevic; Part V. Discourses in the Commons: 15. Polar opposites: environmental discourses and management in Antarctica and the Arctic Donald R. Rothwell; 16. Heritage discourses Ben Boer and Stefan Gruber; 17. Environmental principles and social change in the ocean dumping regime: a case study of the disposal of carbon dioxide into the seabed Afshin Akhtarkhavari; 18. Environmental discourses in the ocean commons: the case of ocean fertilisation Julia Mayo-Ramsay; Concluding remarks: discourse versus strategy Thomas Pogge.
650 0 $aEnvironmental law, International$vCongresses.
650 7 $aLAW / International.$2bisacsh
700 1 $aJessup, Brad,$d1978-
700 1 $aRubenstein, Kim.
856 42 $3Cover image$uhttp://assets.cambridge.org/97811070/19423/cover/9781107019423.jpg