Energy Justice and Energy Law
Herausgeber: del Guayo, Iñigo; González, José Juan; Montoya, Milton Fernando; Zillman, Donald D; Godden, Lee
Energy Justice and Energy Law
Herausgeber: del Guayo, Iñigo; González, José Juan; Montoya, Milton Fernando; Zillman, Donald D; Godden, Lee
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Energy justice is increasingly a purposive element of energy law and regulation. This collection explores how laws are constructed and how they could be applied in future to support an international transition in energy regulation in response to the challenges of climate change, whilst ensuring that energy is made available to all.
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Energy justice is increasingly a purposive element of energy law and regulation. This collection explores how laws are constructed and how they could be applied in future to support an international transition in energy regulation in response to the challenges of climate change, whilst ensuring that energy is made available to all.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Juli 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 178mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 907g
- ISBN-13: 9780198860754
- ISBN-10: 0198860757
- Artikelnr.: 58734172
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Juli 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 178mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 907g
- ISBN-13: 9780198860754
- ISBN-10: 0198860757
- Artikelnr.: 58734172
Iñigo del Guayo is Professor in Administrative Law at the University of Almería. He received his two law Decrees (LLM and PhD) from the University of Navarre. He has researched and published widely in the area of Energy Law, within a wider interest in Public Economic Law and Regulation. He is the editor and a co-author of the three editions of the Book 'Energy Law in Europe. National, European Union and International Law and Regulation' (Oxford University Press). Since 1995 he has been a member of the Academic Advisory Group (AAG) of the Section on Energy, Environment, Resources & Infrastructure Law (SEERIL) of the International Bar Association. He is Vice-president of the Spanish Energy Law Association (AEDEN) and member of the Scientific Committee of the European Federation of Energy Law Associations. Lee Godden is the Director of the Centre of Resources, Energy, and Environmental Law at Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne. She teaches Environmental Law, Water Law, Climate Change and Disaster Law, and Legal Theory. Her research interests include energy law and transition and natural resources law, property and environmental law scholarship and Indigenous peoples' rights to land and waters. She has published widely in these fields. Previously, she was an Australian Law Reform Commissioner. Currently she is Chair of the Academic Advisory Group, Section on Energy, Environment, Natural Resources, and Infrastructure Law (SEERIL), International Bar Association. Donald N. Zilllman is Godfrey Professor of Law and former Dean of the University of Maine Law School. He served as President of the University of Maine at Presque Isle from 2006-12. He has written and consulted on energy law matters since the 1980s and has been Lead Editor, Editor, and author on most of the collaborations of the Academic Advisory Group of the International Bar Association and Oxford University Press since 2002. Milton Fernando Montoya has completed Post-Doctoral Studies at Dundee University (United Kingdom). He received his PhD in law from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid (Spain), and his master's degree in Energy Law from the Instituto Superior de la Energía (Spain). He is a lawyer and Research Director at the Institute of Mining and Energy Law at Universidad Externado de Colombia. He is an Honorary Lecturer at the Centre for Energy, Petroleum and Mineral Law and Policy, University of Dundee (UK), member of the Academic Advisory Group (AAG), Section on Energy, Environment, Natural Resources and Infrastructure Law (SEERIL), International Bar Association (IBA), and member of the board of the Colombian Mining and Petroleum Bar Association. He is a founding partner of Estudio Jurídico Montoya & Asociados, and legal advisor for Colombian mining and energy companies and authorities. José Juan González received his LLM in Economic Law from Metropolitan Autonomous University, Mexico, and his PhD in Environmental Law from the University of Alicante, Spain. He is Full Professor and Researcher at the Metropolitan Autonomous University in Mexico, chairman of the Mexican Institute for Environmental Law Research, and Director of the Mexican Environmental Law Journal. Professor Gonzalez is a fellow of the National Research System of the Mexican Council of Science and Technology, level III. He is a member of the Governing Council of the IUCN Academy of Environmental Law and of the Academic Advisory Group of the International Bar Association, Energy, Environment and Infrastructure Law section. He was Director of the Legal Division of the Attorney General's Office for Environmental Protection. In 1999, he drafted the Environmental Act of Mexico City, which is currently in force.
* Part I. Introduction
* 1: Iñigo del Guayo, Lee Godden, Don Zillman, Milton Fernando Montoya,
and José Juan González: Introduction
* Part II. Conceptual and International Law Context
* 2: Aileen McHarg: Energy justice: understanding the "ethical turn" in
energy law and policy
* 3: Iñigo del Guayo: Energy poverty and energy access: a legal
analysis
* 4: Catherine Redgwell and Lavanya Rajamani: And just for all? Energy
justice in international law
* Part III. Procedural Justice, Community Participation, and
Restorative Justice
* 5: Annalisa Savaresi: Community energy and a just energy transition:
what we know, and what we still need to find out
* 6: Catherine Banet: Electricity network tariffs regulation and
distributive energy justice: balancing the need for new investments
and a fair energy transition
* 7: Lee Paddock and Achinthi Vithanage: Collaborating with underserved
communities to contribute to decarbonization in the U.S.
* 8: Anatole Boute: Energy justice along the "New Silk Road": balancing
investors' and consumers' rights in Central Asia
* Part IV. Consumers at the Frontline of a New Energy Justice
* 9: Hanri Mostert and Tjakie Naude: State protection of energy
consumers: between human rights and private sector regulation
* 10: Martha Roggenkamp and Lea Diestelmeier: Energy market reforms in
the EU: a new focus on energy poverty and energy (in)justice
* 11: Lee Godden: Energy justice and energy transition in Australia:
from remote access to consumer protection
* Part V. Access to Energy, Poverty, and Distributive Justice
* 12: Barry Barton and Jennifer Campion: Justice and the design of
climate change legislation: avoiding regressive measures
* 13: Milton Fernando Montoya and others: Meanings of energy poverty in
the South American context: a regional overview
* 14: Al Lucas: The challenges of rural electrification in Canada
* 15: Damilola S. Olawuyi: Energy poverty in the Middle East and North
African (MENA) region: divergent tales and future prospects
* Part VI. Energy at the Centre of Social (or Recognition) Justice
* 16: Don Zillman and Don Smith: Trump's America and its impact on
energy justice
* 17: José Juan González: Energy justice, law, and poverty in the
context of Mesoamerican countries
* 18: Wang Mingyuang and Yang Xue: Energy justice in transitional
China: law and policy perspective
* 19: Yinka Omorogbe: Power to the people? Comparative analyses of
energy access in Ghana, Rwanda, and Nigeria
* Part VII. Conclusion
* Conclusion
* 1: Iñigo del Guayo, Lee Godden, Don Zillman, Milton Fernando Montoya,
and José Juan González: Introduction
* Part II. Conceptual and International Law Context
* 2: Aileen McHarg: Energy justice: understanding the "ethical turn" in
energy law and policy
* 3: Iñigo del Guayo: Energy poverty and energy access: a legal
analysis
* 4: Catherine Redgwell and Lavanya Rajamani: And just for all? Energy
justice in international law
* Part III. Procedural Justice, Community Participation, and
Restorative Justice
* 5: Annalisa Savaresi: Community energy and a just energy transition:
what we know, and what we still need to find out
* 6: Catherine Banet: Electricity network tariffs regulation and
distributive energy justice: balancing the need for new investments
and a fair energy transition
* 7: Lee Paddock and Achinthi Vithanage: Collaborating with underserved
communities to contribute to decarbonization in the U.S.
* 8: Anatole Boute: Energy justice along the "New Silk Road": balancing
investors' and consumers' rights in Central Asia
* Part IV. Consumers at the Frontline of a New Energy Justice
* 9: Hanri Mostert and Tjakie Naude: State protection of energy
consumers: between human rights and private sector regulation
* 10: Martha Roggenkamp and Lea Diestelmeier: Energy market reforms in
the EU: a new focus on energy poverty and energy (in)justice
* 11: Lee Godden: Energy justice and energy transition in Australia:
from remote access to consumer protection
* Part V. Access to Energy, Poverty, and Distributive Justice
* 12: Barry Barton and Jennifer Campion: Justice and the design of
climate change legislation: avoiding regressive measures
* 13: Milton Fernando Montoya and others: Meanings of energy poverty in
the South American context: a regional overview
* 14: Al Lucas: The challenges of rural electrification in Canada
* 15: Damilola S. Olawuyi: Energy poverty in the Middle East and North
African (MENA) region: divergent tales and future prospects
* Part VI. Energy at the Centre of Social (or Recognition) Justice
* 16: Don Zillman and Don Smith: Trump's America and its impact on
energy justice
* 17: José Juan González: Energy justice, law, and poverty in the
context of Mesoamerican countries
* 18: Wang Mingyuang and Yang Xue: Energy justice in transitional
China: law and policy perspective
* 19: Yinka Omorogbe: Power to the people? Comparative analyses of
energy access in Ghana, Rwanda, and Nigeria
* Part VII. Conclusion
* Conclusion
* Part I. Introduction
* 1: Iñigo del Guayo, Lee Godden, Don Zillman, Milton Fernando Montoya,
and José Juan González: Introduction
* Part II. Conceptual and International Law Context
* 2: Aileen McHarg: Energy justice: understanding the "ethical turn" in
energy law and policy
* 3: Iñigo del Guayo: Energy poverty and energy access: a legal
analysis
* 4: Catherine Redgwell and Lavanya Rajamani: And just for all? Energy
justice in international law
* Part III. Procedural Justice, Community Participation, and
Restorative Justice
* 5: Annalisa Savaresi: Community energy and a just energy transition:
what we know, and what we still need to find out
* 6: Catherine Banet: Electricity network tariffs regulation and
distributive energy justice: balancing the need for new investments
and a fair energy transition
* 7: Lee Paddock and Achinthi Vithanage: Collaborating with underserved
communities to contribute to decarbonization in the U.S.
* 8: Anatole Boute: Energy justice along the "New Silk Road": balancing
investors' and consumers' rights in Central Asia
* Part IV. Consumers at the Frontline of a New Energy Justice
* 9: Hanri Mostert and Tjakie Naude: State protection of energy
consumers: between human rights and private sector regulation
* 10: Martha Roggenkamp and Lea Diestelmeier: Energy market reforms in
the EU: a new focus on energy poverty and energy (in)justice
* 11: Lee Godden: Energy justice and energy transition in Australia:
from remote access to consumer protection
* Part V. Access to Energy, Poverty, and Distributive Justice
* 12: Barry Barton and Jennifer Campion: Justice and the design of
climate change legislation: avoiding regressive measures
* 13: Milton Fernando Montoya and others: Meanings of energy poverty in
the South American context: a regional overview
* 14: Al Lucas: The challenges of rural electrification in Canada
* 15: Damilola S. Olawuyi: Energy poverty in the Middle East and North
African (MENA) region: divergent tales and future prospects
* Part VI. Energy at the Centre of Social (or Recognition) Justice
* 16: Don Zillman and Don Smith: Trump's America and its impact on
energy justice
* 17: José Juan González: Energy justice, law, and poverty in the
context of Mesoamerican countries
* 18: Wang Mingyuang and Yang Xue: Energy justice in transitional
China: law and policy perspective
* 19: Yinka Omorogbe: Power to the people? Comparative analyses of
energy access in Ghana, Rwanda, and Nigeria
* Part VII. Conclusion
* Conclusion
* 1: Iñigo del Guayo, Lee Godden, Don Zillman, Milton Fernando Montoya,
and José Juan González: Introduction
* Part II. Conceptual and International Law Context
* 2: Aileen McHarg: Energy justice: understanding the "ethical turn" in
energy law and policy
* 3: Iñigo del Guayo: Energy poverty and energy access: a legal
analysis
* 4: Catherine Redgwell and Lavanya Rajamani: And just for all? Energy
justice in international law
* Part III. Procedural Justice, Community Participation, and
Restorative Justice
* 5: Annalisa Savaresi: Community energy and a just energy transition:
what we know, and what we still need to find out
* 6: Catherine Banet: Electricity network tariffs regulation and
distributive energy justice: balancing the need for new investments
and a fair energy transition
* 7: Lee Paddock and Achinthi Vithanage: Collaborating with underserved
communities to contribute to decarbonization in the U.S.
* 8: Anatole Boute: Energy justice along the "New Silk Road": balancing
investors' and consumers' rights in Central Asia
* Part IV. Consumers at the Frontline of a New Energy Justice
* 9: Hanri Mostert and Tjakie Naude: State protection of energy
consumers: between human rights and private sector regulation
* 10: Martha Roggenkamp and Lea Diestelmeier: Energy market reforms in
the EU: a new focus on energy poverty and energy (in)justice
* 11: Lee Godden: Energy justice and energy transition in Australia:
from remote access to consumer protection
* Part V. Access to Energy, Poverty, and Distributive Justice
* 12: Barry Barton and Jennifer Campion: Justice and the design of
climate change legislation: avoiding regressive measures
* 13: Milton Fernando Montoya and others: Meanings of energy poverty in
the South American context: a regional overview
* 14: Al Lucas: The challenges of rural electrification in Canada
* 15: Damilola S. Olawuyi: Energy poverty in the Middle East and North
African (MENA) region: divergent tales and future prospects
* Part VI. Energy at the Centre of Social (or Recognition) Justice
* 16: Don Zillman and Don Smith: Trump's America and its impact on
energy justice
* 17: José Juan González: Energy justice, law, and poverty in the
context of Mesoamerican countries
* 18: Wang Mingyuang and Yang Xue: Energy justice in transitional
China: law and policy perspective
* 19: Yinka Omorogbe: Power to the people? Comparative analyses of
energy access in Ghana, Rwanda, and Nigeria
* Part VII. Conclusion
* Conclusion