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The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law
Daniel Bodansky, Jutta Brunnée, and Ellen Hey
1,112 pages
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5 line drawings, 1 table
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246x171mm
978-0-19-926970-9
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Hardback
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15 February 2007
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- Provides an authoritative overview of major developments in international environmental law, and the field's core assumptions and concepts, basic analytical tools, and key challenges
- Examines international environmental law from a broader policy and theoretical perspective, drawing on insights from other disciplines such as political science, economics, and philosophy
- Features original, accessible, and agenda-setting essays by leading academics and practitioners
The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law 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 is intended to serve as an authoritative and indispensable overview of the field. Although the Handbook focuses on international environmental law, it also examines the subject from a broader policy and theoretical perspective, drawing on insights from other disciplines such as political science, economics, and philosophy. It aims to strike a balance between practical
preoccupations and critical or theoretical reflection. Each chapter examines an issue that is central to current scholarly debates or policy development. At the same time, the Handbook is structured as a whole to provide readers with both a 'bigger picture' of international environmental law and a more in-depth understanding of its preoccupations. This approach is particularly important at a time in the development of international environmental law when its fragmentation into increasingly specialized sub-fields obscures unifying themes and cross-cutting challenges. The Handbook consists of 47 chapters in seven parts. Part I sets the stage for the Handbook, identifying overarching issues. Part II offers readers a range of theoretical lenses through which to
analyze both the problems facing international environmental law and the solutions it may offer. Part III reviews the treatment of basic issues areas. Part IV analyzes the process of normative development in international environmental law. Part V will assess key theoretical concepts. Part VI examines the roles of various actors and institutions. And Part VII analyzes issues of implementation and enforcement. The Oxford Handbooks series is a major new initiative in academic publishing. Each volume offers an authoritative and state-of-the-art survey of current thinking and research in a particular subject area. Specially commissioned essays from leading international figures in the discipline give critical examinations of the progress and direction of debates.
Oxford Handbooks provide scholars and graduate students with compelling new perspectives upon a wide range of subjects in law, humanities and social sciences.Readership: Academics, scholars, and advanced students of International Environmental Law, Environmental Economics, and International Law
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Daniel Bodansky, Woodruff Professor of International Law, School of Law, University of Georgia, Jutta Brunnée, Professor of Law and Metcalf Chair in Environmental Law, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, and Ellen Hey, Professor of Public International Law, Faculty of Law, Erasmus University Rotterdam Contributors: Dan Bodansky Jutta Brunnée Ellen Hey Peter Sand John Dryzek Benedict Kingsbury Jeffrey Dunoff Stephen Toope Alan Boyle Richard Stewart Steinar Andresen Tora Skodvin Kyle Danish Scott Barrett Karin Mickelson Christopher Stone Ian Rowlands David Freestone Salman M.A. Salman Rosemary Rayfuse David Wirth Ulrich Beyerlin Pierre-Marie Dupuy Thomas Gehring Naomi Roht-Arriaza Jason Morrison Günther Handl Dan Tarlock Jonathan Wiener Daniel Magraw Dinah Shelton J.G. Merrills Jonas Ebbesson Thilo Marauhn Peter Spiro Peter Haas Steven Ratner Russell Barsh Ludwig Krämer Geir Ulfstein Ron Mitchell Catherine Redgwell Laurence Boisson de
Chazournes Jorgen Wettestad Jan Klabbers Malgosia Fitzmaurice Cesare Romano
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1: Dan Bodansky, Jutta Brunnée, Ellen Hey: Mapping the Field
Part I General Issues
2: Peter Sand: The Evolution of International Environmental Law
3: John Dryzek: Paradigms and Discourses
4: Benedict Kingsbury: Global Environmental Governance as Administration
5: Jeffrey Dunoff: Levels of Environmental Governance
6: Stephen Toope: Formality and Informality
7: Alan Boyle: Relationship between International Environmental Law and Other Branches of International Law
8: Richard Stewart: Instrument Choice
9: Steinar Andresen, Jon Birger Skjaerseth: Science and Technology
Part II: Analytical Tools and Perspectives
10: Kyle Danish: International Relations Theory
11: Scott Barrett: An Economic Theory of International Environmental Law
12: Karin Mickelson: Critical Approaches
13: Christopher Stone: Ethics and International Environmental Law
Part III: Basic Issues Areas
14: Ian Rowlands: Atmosphere and Outer Space
15: David Freestone, Salman M.A. Salman: Ocean and Freshwater Resources
16: Rosemary Rayfuse: Biological Resources
17: David Wirth: Hazardous Substances and Activities
Part IV: Normative Development
18: Ulrich Beyerlin: Different Types of Norms in International Environmental Law
19: Pierre-Marie Dupuy: Formation of Customary International Law and General Principles
20: Thomas Gehring: Treaty Making and Treaty Evolution
21: Naomi Roht-Arriaza & Jason Morrison: Private and Quasi-Private Standard Setting
Part V: Key Concepts
22: Günther Handl: Transboundary Impacts
23: Jutta Brunnée: Common Areas, Common Heritage, Common Concern
24: Dan Tarlock: Ecosystems
25: Jonathan Wiener: Precaution
26: Daniel Magraw and Lisa Hawke: Sustainable Development
27: Dinah Shelton: Equity
28: J.G. Merrills: Environmental Rights
29: Jonas Ebbesson: Public Participation
30: Daniel Bodansky: Legitimacy
Part VI: Actors and Institutions
31: Thilo Marauhn: Changing Role of the State
32: Ellen Hey: International Institutions
33: Peter Spiro: NGOs and Civil Society
34: Peter Haas: Epistemic Communities
35: Steven Ratner: Business
36: Russell Barsh: Indigenous Peoples
37: Ludwig Krämer: Regional Economic Integration Organizations
38: Geir Ulfstein: Treaty Bodies
Part VII: Implementation and Enforcement
39: Ron Mitchell: Compliance Theory
40: Catherine Redgwell: National Implementation
41: Laurence Boisson de Chazournes: Financial and Technological Transfers
42: Jorgen Wettestad: Monitoring and Verification
43: Jan Klabbers: Compliance Procedures
44: Malgosia Fitzmaurice: International Responsibility and Liability
45: Cesare Romano: International Dispute Settlement
46: Dan Bodansky, Jutta Brunnée, Ellen Hey: Conclusions
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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