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The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law

Online ISBN:
9780191743740
Print ISBN:
9780199552153
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law

Daniel Bodansky (ed.),
Daniel Bodansky
(ed.)
Law, Ethics, and Sustainability, Arizona State University
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Daniel Bodansky, Professor of Law and Emily and Ernest Woodruff Chair of International Law, University of Georgia School of Law, Athens, Georgia, USA. Professor Bodansky has written extensively on international environmental law generally, and climate change in particular. He served as the US Department of State's Climate Change Coordinator from 1999–2001, co-edited (with Jutta Brunnée and Ellen Hey) the Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law, and is on the Editorial Board of the American Journal of International Law.

Jutta Brunnée (ed.),
Jutta Brunnée
(ed.)
Law, University of Toronto
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Jutta Brunnée Professor of Law and Metcalf Chair in Environmental Law at the University of Toronto, Canada.

Ellen Hey (ed.)
Ellen Hey
(ed.)
Law, Erasmus University
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Ellen Hey is Professor of Law and Deputy Director, GLODIS Institute, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

Published online:
18 September 2012
Published in print:
7 August 2008
Online ISBN:
9780191743740
Print ISBN:
9780199552153
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

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Abstract

This book takes stock of the major developments in international environmental law, while exploring the field's core assumptions and concepts, basic analytical tools, and key challenges. It aims to strike a balance between practical preoccupations and critical or theoretical reflection. Each chapter examines an issue that is central to scholarly debates or policy development. The book consists of forty-seven chapters in seven parts. Part I sets the stage, identifying overarching issues. Part II offers readers a range of theoretical lenses through which to analyse both the problems facing international environmental law and the solutions it may offer. Part III reviews the treatment of basic-issues areas. Part IV analyses the process of normative development in international environmental law. Part V assesses key theoretical concepts. Part VI examines the roles of various actors and institutions, and Part VII analyses issues of implementation and enforcement. Topics range from global environmental governance as administration and its implications for international law, science and technology, international relations theory, ethics and international environmental law, ecosystems and sustainable development, hazardous substances and activities, and international dispute settlement.

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