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Préface
This multi-author volume offers an interdisciplinary and comparative analysis of the implementation of climate change policies worldwide.
Auteur
Ottavio Quirico is an Associate Professor with the School of Law at the University of New England and the Australian National University's Centre for European Studies, and a Senior Researcher at the University for Foreigners in Perugia. He is also a Visiting Professor at the University of Pisa's Department of Political Science and at the Law Department of the Federal University of Paraiba in João Pessoa. He has held several other senior positions in universities across the globe and has acted as a consultant to the United Nations. He is, inter alia, the co-author of Australian Uniform Evidence Law (Cambridge University Press, 2nd edn., 2022).Walter Baber is a Professor in the Environmental Sciences and Policy Program at the Graduate Centre for Public Policy and Administration at California State University, Long Beach, United States. He is also an Affiliated Professor at the Raoul Wallenberg Institute at the University of Lund, Sweden, and an Associate of the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance at the University of Canberra, Australia. He has held distinguished positions at universities and institutions worldwide. He is the co-author of Democratic Norms of Earth System Governance: Deliberative Politics in the Anthropocene (Cambridge University Press, 2020) and editor of Environmental Human Rights in the Anthropocene (Cambridge University Press, 2022).
Résumé
The chapters in this volume provide an interdisciplinary and comparative analysis of the implementation of climate change policies worldwide to assess whether they are meeting the aims set out in the 'Paris Agreement'. The first part compares climate policies employed by the EU, the US, Latin America, Russia, China, the Middle East, and Africa. The second explores ways of improving key regulatory mechanisms to increase the effectiveness of greenhouse gas mitigation and adaptation measures. This book argues that the international community should improve the effectiveness of enforcement mechanisms from the standpoint of secondary norms through an integrated approach. It is an indispensable resource for undergraduate and graduate students of environmental policy and governance, public policy, law and political science, as well as policy makers. This title is part of the Flip it Open Programme and may also be available as Open Access. Check our website - Cambridge Core - for details. (150, 992)
Contenu
About the editors and contributors; Abbreviations; Introduction; Part I. Comparing Climate Policies: 1. The earth's climate and ongoing global change Roberto Buizza; 2. Building blocks of the European union's strategy for climate neutrality Ilaria Conti, Nicolò Rossetto, Pierre Schlosser and Stefano Verde; 3. Environmental constitutionalism: the implementation perspective and the different souls of the European green deal Walter Baber; 4. Avoiding Russia's sphere of influence: the European union, energy supply and climate sustainability Ottavio Quirico; 5. The US and climate policies: patterns and progress in compounded muddling Robert Bartlett; 6. Great expectations: challenges to the implementation of climate policies in Latin America and the Caribbean Pablo Cristóbal Jiménez Lobeira; 7. What does 'green' mean for a green belt and road? Wenting Cheng; 8. Embracing complexity: water and climate in the Middle East and North Africa Alexandria Feruglio and Aaron Tang; 9. Between Europe and the people's republic of China: understanding Africa's energy transition Joshua Woodyatt and Broneal Sarkosh-Nejad; Part II. Designing Effective Governance Mechanisms: 10. European green deal, climate policies and the energy dilemma: investment protection v sustainable investment? Ottavio Quirico; 11. Twin transitions? implementing climate policies in the European union through digital transformation Ottavio Quirico and Walter Baber; 12. Carbon sequestration and ocean governance: emerging challenges between traditional sovereign rights and the need for global regulation Patrizia Vigni; 13. Climate change and the arctic: a study of paradoxical linkages in complex systems Oran Young; 14. The Europen union's carbon border adjustment mechanism as a (generally lawful) countermeasure Ottavio Quirico; 15. Corporate self-regulation and climate: the legal trajectory of sustainability due diligence in the European Union Radu Mares; 16. Extending ecolabeling in response to climate change Alfredo Ferrante; 17. The role of judges in implementing climate policies: a comparative perspective on the separation of powers Ivano Alogna, Natalie Arnould and Alina Holzhausen; 18. Private climate litigation: enforcing corporate climate responsibility through dispute resolution? a taxonomy Andreas Hosli; 19. The International Court of Justice facing the existential threat of climate change: what legal questions and for whom? Laura Magi; 20. 'The story is part of the success': narrating climate change Katarzyna Kwapisz Williams; Conclusion; Documents; Cases; Bibliography; Index.