This book explains how international law structures global environmental harm and injustice while claiming to protect the environment. It outlines the possibility for a more sustainable and equitable world by drawing inspiration from diverse disciplines and marginalised sociocultural traditions to move towards a genuinely international law.
This book explains how international law structures global environmental harm and injustice while claiming to protect the environment. It outlines the possibility for a more sustainable and equitable world by drawing inspiration from diverse disciplines and marginalised sociocultural traditions to move towards a genuinely international law.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Introduction: where is the environment? Locating nature in international law Usha Natarajan and Julia Dehm; Part I. Locating Nature in International Law: Towards New Thinking: 1. Locating nature: making and unmaking international law Usha Natarajan and Kishan Khoday; 2. From classical liberalism to neoliberalism: explaining the contradictions in the international environmental law project Hélène Mayrand; 3. Reconfiguring environmental governance in the green economy: extraction, stewardship and natural capital Julia Dehm; Part II. Unmaking International Law: 4. Appropriating nature: commerce, property and the commodification of nature in the Law of Nations Ileana Porras; 5. Reflections on a political ecology of sovereignty: engaging international law and 'the map' Tyler McCreary and Vanessa Lamb; 6. The maps of international law: perceptions of nature in the classification of territory beyond the state Karin Mickelson; 7. Denaturalising the concept of territory in international law Cait Storr; 8. Who do we think we are? Human rights in a time of ecological change Usha Natarajan; 9. Law, labour and landscape in a just transition Adrian A. Smith and Dayna Nadine Scott; Part III. Alternatives and Remakings: 10. Three enclosures of international law: commoning premises, processes and aims Darina Petrova and Tomaso Ferrando; 11. The mythic environment: ecocosmology and narrative remakings of environmental consciousness Kishan Khoday; 12. Law and politics of the human/nature: exploring the foundations and institutions of the 'rights of nature' Roger Merino; 13. Narrating nature: climate imaginaries in international law Kathleen Birrell; 14. Inter-nation relationships and the natural world as relation Irene Watson; Conclusion: Remaking International Law Usha Natarajan and Julia Dehm.
Introduction: where is the environment? Locating nature in international law Usha Natarajan and Julia Dehm; Part I. Locating Nature in International Law: Towards New Thinking: 1. Locating nature: making and unmaking international law Usha Natarajan and Kishan Khoday; 2. From classical liberalism to neoliberalism: explaining the contradictions in the international environmental law project Hélène Mayrand; 3. Reconfiguring environmental governance in the green economy: extraction, stewardship and natural capital Julia Dehm; Part II. Unmaking International Law: 4. Appropriating nature: commerce, property and the commodification of nature in the Law of Nations Ileana Porras; 5. Reflections on a political ecology of sovereignty: engaging international law and 'the map' Tyler McCreary and Vanessa Lamb; 6. The maps of international law: perceptions of nature in the classification of territory beyond the state Karin Mickelson; 7. Denaturalising the concept of territory in international law Cait Storr; 8. Who do we think we are? Human rights in a time of ecological change Usha Natarajan; 9. Law, labour and landscape in a just transition Adrian A. Smith and Dayna Nadine Scott; Part III. Alternatives and Remakings: 10. Three enclosures of international law: commoning premises, processes and aims Darina Petrova and Tomaso Ferrando; 11. The mythic environment: ecocosmology and narrative remakings of environmental consciousness Kishan Khoday; 12. Law and politics of the human/nature: exploring the foundations and institutions of the 'rights of nature' Roger Merino; 13. Narrating nature: climate imaginaries in international law Kathleen Birrell; 14. Inter-nation relationships and the natural world as relation Irene Watson; Conclusion: Remaking International Law Usha Natarajan and Julia Dehm.
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