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This book expands on law-related research by examining the legal aspects of sustainability with a focus on the impact on business strategies. It recognizes that firms must adopt an integrated approach to law and sustainability, considering multiple disciplines and goals, and serve as a forum for bringing together scholarship from fields such as environmental law, energy, government regulation and intellectual property. Firms increasingly have an interest in transitioning to sustainable business practices that take into consideration the fact that global resources are finite and will be increasingly scarce. They acknowledge that current actions have social, economic and environmental consequences and employ options to ensure that future generations have the same options and benefits. Examples of sustainable practices increasingly employed by firms include the institutionalization of whole life-cycle analysis in marketing and product design, utilization of sustainable inputs and energy sources, tracking and reporting sustainability performance, attempting the valuation of future generation prosperity and happiness as a discounting mechanism, and integrating sustainability into firm culture and management goals. It is clear that law and regulation have an extremely important role to play in the transition to more sustainable business practices. Broadly stated, law can provide structure for firms responding to forces that pull transition by enabling sustainability leadership and competitive advantage through funding models, intellectual property rights and collaboration means. Additionally, law can work to push transition by compelling firms to act through regulatory structures, accounting and governance mechanisms.
Combines theoretical and experiential accounts of firm behavior and legal regulation as they intersect Integrates insights from different bodies of law, including environmental law, energy, government regulation and intellectual property Covers a variety of geographic regions where law, sustainability and business interact
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This book examines the key legal and business aspects of sustainability in depth. Recognizing the firm's need for integrated approaches to law and sustainability as well as adaptive goal setting, the book unites scholars from environmental law, energy, risk regulation and intellectual property. Most firms now recognize that global resources are finite and will grow increasingly scarce. They acknowledge that their actions have social, economic and environmental consequences. Some firms now practice whole life-cycle analysis in marketing and product design, seek sustainable inputs and energy sources, and track and report sustainability performance overall, however it can be measured. But standard practices have not kept pace. Regulators must support such efforts with mandatory structures for all firms enabling leaders to gain competitive advantages and laggards to pay the price. The variety of regulatory tools has grown to include cooperative funding, intellectual property rights, information disclosures, and other means. And that variety is most urgently needed in transition economies where the forces of international competition can be the strongest. The chapters in this book push beyond the traditional boundaries separating these dimensions of law, business and sustainability to offer both practical insights and directions for future research in this immense and growing nexus.
Contenu
Design for Regulation: Integrating Sustainable Production into Mainstream Regulation.- Mandating Sustainability: When Federal Legislation May Preempt the Best Green Building Code Intentions.- An Operational Look at Take-Back Legislation.- Subsidizing Sustainability: The Role of the State and Civil Society in Implementing Wal-Mart's Local Produce Sourcing Program.- IPRs and the Transfer of Technologies that Combat Climate Change: the Untapped Potential of Licensing.- The Benefits of a Sustainable Energy Trade Agreement (SETA).- The Future of Sustainability Reporting as a Regulatory Mechanism.- Green washing 2.0: Identifying a New Paradigm Through B-to-B Threat Matrices.