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The Elgar Encyclopedia of Environmental Law is a landmark reference
work, providing definitive and comprehensive coverage of this
dynamic field. Each volume probes the key elements of law, the
essential concepts, and the latest research through concise,
structured entries written by international experts. Each entry
includes an extensive bibliography as a starting point for further
reading. The mix of authoritative commentary and insightful
discussion will make this an essential tool for research and
teaching, as well as a valuable resource for professionals and
policymakers. This volume of the Elgar Encyclopedia of
Environmental Law presents a structured overview and selective
analysis of multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs). These
agreements encompass the regulating aspects of the protection,
conservation, management, use and exploitation of living and
natural resources in various areas including biodiversity,
fisheries, marine environment, shared freshwater resources,
atmosphere, climate change, human rights, and polar regions. The
expert contributions offer critical analysis and a concise but
informative approach that provides a comprehensive introduction to
each agreement as well as to the broader landscape of MEAs. The
book guides the reader through the multifarious conventional
regulation of each area of environmental protection, both at the
global and regional levels. It details the path from the first
post-war sectorial attempts at introducing international pieces of
conventional environmental regulation to the booming of
environmental instruments of the 1990s and the recent fertile
period of new MEAs and their exponential growth. Each entry
includes an overview of the topic, a concise review of current
knowledge, new directions for cutting-edge research and a detailed
bibliography to facilitate further reading. This comprehensive,
topical and accessible volume is an essential resource for
environmental law practitioners, students and scholars seeking a
broad overview of MEAs, concise explanations of individual
agreements, and avenues for research.
Traditional means of international dispute settlement have proved
to be largely ineffective in ensuring the effectiveness of
international environmental law. Thus, states are increasingly
creating regime-specific systems to control, facilitate and assist
the implementation of and compliance with each multilateral
environmental agreement. By bringing together the perspectives of
scholars, negotiators and practitioners, this book provides a
comprehensive and in-depth analysis of the most advanced of these
systems, the so-called "non-compliance mechanisms", in which a
specialized treaty body is entrusted with the task of examining
cases of non-compliance by State parties. Included are descriptions
of each mechanism and an analysis of cross-cutting issues. It also
explains how these systems relate to relevant concepts and
mechanisms of general international law and, for the first time, of
European Union law. The book is a valuable source of information
and recommended reading for academics, practitioners, civil
servants, NGOs and all those interested in public international
law, EC law and environmental law. Tullio Treves is a Judge at the
International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea and Professor of
International Law at the University of Milan; Laura Pineschi is
Professor of International Law at the University of Parma; Attila
Tanzi is Professor of International Law at the University of
Bologna and Chairperson of the Compliance Committee of the Protocol
on Water and Health; Cesare Pitea is Aggregate Professor of
International and European Law at the University of Parma; Chiara
Ragni is a Senior Researcher in International Law at the University
of Milan; and Francesca Romanin Jacur is a Post-doc Researcher in
International Law at the University of Milan and Legal Adviser to
the Italian Ministry of the Environment, Land and Sea in a project
of the University of Siena.
General Principles and the Coherence of International Lawprovides a
collection of intellectually stimulating contributions from leading
international lawyers to the discourse on the role of general
principles in international law. Offering a comprehensive analysis
of the doctrines, practices, and debates on general principles of
law, the volume assesses their role in safeguarding the coherence
of the international legal system. This important book addresses
the relationship between principles of law and the other sources of
international law, explores the interplay between principles of law
and domestic and regional legal systems and the role of principles
of law with regard to three specific regimes of international law:
investment law, human rights law and environmental law.
With contributions by a multinational group of academic scholars,
judges and registrars of international tribunals, and experts from
Non-Governmental Organizations, this book explores the role of
civil society with regards to international courts and tribunals,
as well as compliance mechanisms set up especially in the
environmental field. The areas of human rights, international
criminal law and international environmental law are the main focus
of the study, in the light of the well established role of NGOs in
Human Rights Courts and UN bodies as well as their remarkable
success in setting up the International Criminal Court and the
promising avenues which are now open in the compliance bodies of
environmental law conventions. Broader questions and bodies such as
the International Court of Justice, the International Tribunal for
the Law of the Sea as well as European courts and tribunals are
also examined.
General Principles of Law in Investment Arbitration surveys the
function of general principles in the field of international
investment law, particularly in investment arbitration. The
authors' analysis provides a representative case study of how this
informal source operates alongside and in the absence of other
sources of applicable law. The contributions are divided into two
parts, devoted respectively to substantive principles and
procedural ones. The principles discussed in the book are selected
for their currency in the practice, their contested nature and
their relevance.
Problems relating to the non-navigational uses of international
watercourses have the capacity to be among the most serious causes
of international conflicts in the new century. The Convention
adopted by the UN General Assembly on 21 May 1997 is the first
comprehensive attempt to provide at the universal level a coherent
set of rules for the avoidance, management and settlement of such
conflicts. This book gives a brief history of the codification
process leading to the adoption of the Convention and considers the
conflicting approaches to the subject that have been taken over the
years.
It examines the Convention as future treaty law and considers its
impact on customary law putting it in the context of existing
relevant international instruments. It analyses the substantive
principles of equitable utilisation and of no-harm, on the one
hand, and the procedural obligations, on the other, and emphasises
their mutual complementarity. The specific rules on the
environmental protection of watercourses are given separate
consideration underlining the indivisibility of water quality and
water quantity issues, while the dispute settlement provisions set
out in the Convention are studied with special emphasis on
negotiated settlement as their ultimate aim.
This book will be a compulsory tool for law makers, negotiators of
future watercourse agreements and water law practitioners, as well
as a required reading for students of the international law of
shared natural resources.
The UNECE Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary
Watercourses and International Lakes provides invaluable insights
into the contribution of this international agreement towards
transboundary water cooperation via its legal provisions,
accompanying institutional arrangements and subsidiary policy
mechanisms. Contributing authors - experts on key aspects of the
Convention - address a broad range of issues, primarily concerning
its: development and evolution; relationship with other
multi-lateral agreements; regulatory framework and general
principles; tools for arresting transboundary pollution; procedural
rules; compliance and liability provisions; and select issues
including its Protocol on Water and Health.
International Investment Law in Latin America: Problems and
Prospects analyses the trend from enthusiasm to diffidence Latin
American countries have recently undergone towards investment law.
Experts draw lessons from the Continent's past experiences while
identifying possible solutions to the important challenges it
faces. En Derecho Internacional de las Inversiones en America
Latina: Problemas y Perspectivas, la tendencia desde el entusiasmo
a la desconfianza de los paises latinoamericanos hacia esta rama
del derecho es analizada, en busqueda de posibles soluciones a los
importantes desafios que actualmente enfrenta esa region.
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