The Global Environment and International Law / Joseph F. C. DiMento.
2021
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Details
Author
Title
The Global Environment and International Law / Joseph F. C. DiMento.
Imprint
Austin : University of Texas Press, [2021]
Copyright
©2003
Description
1 online resource (265 p.)
Formatted Contents Note
Frontmatter
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Acronyms
1. Worldwide Environmental Quality and the Role of Law
2. Law Trying to Save the Earth: Strategies, Institutions, Organizations
3. Law's Targets:Whose Behavior Needs to Be Influenced?
4. An Accounting: Successes and Failures in International Environmental Law
5. International Environmental Law: Expectations and Recommendations
Notes
Bibliography
General Index
Author Index
Conventions Index
Case Index
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Acronyms
1. Worldwide Environmental Quality and the Role of Law
2. Law Trying to Save the Earth: Strategies, Institutions, Organizations
3. Law's Targets:Whose Behavior Needs to Be Influenced?
4. An Accounting: Successes and Failures in International Environmental Law
5. International Environmental Law: Expectations and Recommendations
Notes
Bibliography
General Index
Author Index
Conventions Index
Case Index
Summary
International law has become the key arena for protecting the global environment. Since the 1970s, literally hundreds of international treaties, protocols, conventions, and rules under customary law have been enacted to deal with such problems as global warming, biodiversity loss, and toxic pollution. Proponents of the legal approach to environmental protection have already achieved significant successes in such areas as saving endangered species, reducing pollution, and cleaning up whole regions, but skeptics point to ongoing environmental degradation to argue that international law is an ineffective tool for protecting the global environment. In this book, Joseph DiMento reviews the record of international efforts to use law to make our planet more livable. He looks at how law has been used successfully-often in highly innovative ways-to influence the environmental actions of governments, multinational corporations, and individuals. And he also assesses the failures of international law in order to make policy recommendations that could increase the effectiveness of environmental law. He concludes that a "supranational model" is not the preferred way to influence the actions of sovereign nations and that international environmental law has been and must continue to be a laboratory to test approaches to lawmaking and implementation for the global community.
Language Note
In English.
System Details Note
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
Source of Description
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 29. Nov 2021)
Location
www
Access Note
restricted access (http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec) online access with authorization
Linked Resources
Alternate Title
DeGruyter online
Language
English
ISBN
9780292797772
Record Appears in