Natural Resources Grabbing : an International Law Perspective.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9789004305663
- K3478 -- .N383 2016eb
Intro -- Natural Resources Grabbing: An International Law Perspective -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface -- List of Abbreviations -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction -- PART 1: Mapping the Field -- 1: The Practice of Land Grabbing and Its Compatibility with the Exercise of Territorial Sovereignty -- 2: Resources Grabbing and Human Rights: Building a Triangular Relationship Between States, Indigenous Peoples and Corporations -- PART 2: The Human Rights Context -- 3: Who is Entitled to Cultivate the Land? Sovereignty, Land Resources and Foreign Investments in Agriculture in International Law -- 4: Land Grabbing and International Human Rights: The Jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples -- 5: Water Grabbing and Water Rights: Indigenous 'Sovereignty' v. State Sovereignty? -- 6: Right to Water and Access to Water Resources in the European Development Policy -- PART 3: The Environmental Context -- 7: Tackling the Grabbing of Genetic Resources and of Associated Traditional Knowledge through the Nagoya Protocol -- 8: Natural Resource Grabbing: The Case of Tropical Forests and REDD+ -- 9: International Land Investments or the Environment Put up for Auction: The Case of the Niger Basin -- 10: The European Integration and the 2009 Renewable Energy Directive: A Suitable Framework for the Implementation of the Sustainability Criteria for Biofuels Production in Third-States? -- PART 4: The Investment Context -- 11: Integrating Human Rights into the Extractive Industries: How Investment Contracts Can Achieve Protection -- 12: The Role of International Environmental Principles in Investment Treaty Arbitration: Precautionary and Polluter Pays Principles and Partial Compensation.
13: Exploration and Extraction of Natural Resources: MIGA's Role in the Promotion of Responsible Investments in Developing Countries -- 14: On the World Bank's Efforts in Defence of the Human Right to Land -- PART 5: The WTO Context -- 15: The WTO Members' Right to Protect Animals in International Trade: A TBT Perspective -- 16: Water Resources' Exploitation and Trade Flows: The Impact of International Trade Law -- 17: Energy Export Restrictions in the WTO between Resource Nationalism and Sustainable Development -- PART 6: Conflicts and Crimes -- 18: On the Financing of Civil Wars through Natural Resources: Is There a Duty of Vigilance for Third States on the Activities of Trans-National Corporations? -- 19: Breaking the 'Resource Curse': Prosecuting Pillage of Natural Resources -- 20: Concluding Observations -- Bibliography -- Index.
Natural Resources Grabbing: An International Law Perspective aims at filling a gap in legal literature by addressing the adverse effects that large-scale investments in natural resources may pose to fundamental human rights and the protection of the environment.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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