ORPP logo
Image from Google Jackets

Environmental Law and Governance for the Anthropocene.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: London : Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2017Copyright date: ©2017Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (403 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781509906543
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Environmental Law and Governance for the AnthropoceneDDC classification:
  • 344.046
LOC classification:
  • K3585.5.E58 2017
Online resources:
Contents:
Intro -- Preface: Discomforting Conversations in the Anthropocene -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- Part 1: Back to Basics: The Limits and Potentialof Law and Governancein the Anthropocene -- 1 -- The Role of Sustainable Development and the Associated Principles of Environmental Law and Governance in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. The Impact of Principles of Environmental law in the Holocene: the Rise of Sustainable Development -- III. The Anthropocene: A Focus on Earth Systems -- IV. Conclusion -- 2 -- Reimagining International Environmental Law in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. Earth Systems and Planetary Boundaries -- III. International Environmental Law and Planetary Boundaries -- IV. A Reimagined International Environmental Law for the Anthropocene -- V. Conclusion -- 3 -- Doing Time-The Temporalities of Environmental Law -- I. Time and Environmental Change -- II. Governing the Future -- III. Governing the Past and its Restoration -- IV. Conclusions -- Part 2: Radical Ontologies and Epistemologiesfor the Anthropocene -- 4 -- Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Chthulucene": Re-encountering Environmental Law and its "Subject" with Haraway and New Materialism -- I. Introduction -- II. Haraway"s Framing: Three Stories -- 5 -- Critical Environmental Law and the Double Register of the Anthropocene: A Biopolitical Reading -- I. Introduction -- II. Knowledge, Nature and Law in the Anthropocene -- III. The Double Register of the Anthropocene -- IV. Biopolitics -- V. Reading Environmental Law Biopolitically -- VI. Conclusions -- 6 -- Critical Environmental Law in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. Anthropocenic Grammar -- III. Anthropocenic Theoretical Perspective -- IV. Anthropocenic Methodology: Critical Environmental Law -- V. Conclusion -- 7.
Materiality and the Ontological Turn in the Anthropocene: Establishing a Dialogue between Law, Anthropology and Eco-Philosophy -- I. Introduction: The Crisis of the Anthropocene -- II. Counter Discourse -- III. Materiality -- IV. Ontological Turn in Anthropology -- V. Knowledge and Experience in the Anthropocene -- VI. Law in the Anthropocene -- VII. Conclusion -- Part 3: Planetary Stewardship and Global Justice Reimagined -- 8 -- Global Environmental Governance in the Anthropocene: Setting and Achieving Global Goals -- I. Introduction -- II. Global Goals for the Anthropocene -- III. The Evolution of Global Goals -- IV. The Challenge of Implementation -- V. Lessons from the MDGs and Global Environmental Conventions -- VI. Conclusion -- 9 -- Global Environmental Constitutionalism in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. From Domestic to Global Constitutionalism -- III. Five Approaches to Global Environmental Constitutionalism -- IV. Seven Elements of Global Environmental Constitutionalism -- V. Conclusion -- 10 -- Global Justice in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. The Colonial and Postcolonial Origins of the Anthropocene -- III. International Economic Law and the North-South Divide -- IV. Sustainable Development: Part of the Solution or Part of the Problem? -- V. The Way Forward -- VI. Conclusion -- 11 -- The Imperative of Ecological Integrity: Conceptualising a Fundamental Legal Norm for a New "World System" in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. Jurisprudential Conceptualisations of Ecological Integrity -- III. Analysing the "World-System -- IV. Conclusion: Shaping the "New Story -- Part 4: Possible Futures in Critical 'Spaces' -- 12 -- Of Human Responsibility: Considering the Human/Environment Relationship and Ecosystems in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. The Paradigm of Mastery and its Consequences.
III. The Human/Nature Relationship and Ecosystems -- IV. Is it Possible to Reorient ESAs? A Preliminary Exploration of Rights-based Approaches -- V. Conclusion -- 13 -- The Corporation and the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. Situating Corporate Behaviour -- III. Adapting the Model of the Corporation -- IV. A Levinasian Approach to the Corporation -- V. Conclusion -- 14 -- Judging the Anthropocene: Transformative Adjudication in the Anthropocene Epoch -- I. Introduction -- II. Context: the Failure of Administrative Environmental Law -- III. The Unique Role of Judges in Global Environmental Sustainability -- IV. Civil Actions -- V. The Public Trust Doctrine -- VI. Constitutional Environmental Rights -- VII. Indigenous Environmental Law -- VIII. Conclusion -- 15 -- The Emergence of Transnational Environmental Law in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. A Primer on Transnational Environmental Law -- III. The EU"s Quest for Sustainable Biofuels -- IV. Conclusion -- 16 -- The End of European Union Environmental Law: An Environmental Programme for the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. Phenomenological, Spatial, Temporal and Instrumental Challenges for Environmental Policy -- III. The Human versus Nature Dichotomy in EU Environmental Law -- IV. Temporal Challenges: the Retrospectivity of EU Environmental Law -- V. Conclusion -- Index.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
No physical items for this record

Intro -- Preface: Discomforting Conversations in the Anthropocene -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- Part 1: Back to Basics: The Limits and Potentialof Law and Governancein the Anthropocene -- 1 -- The Role of Sustainable Development and the Associated Principles of Environmental Law and Governance in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. The Impact of Principles of Environmental law in the Holocene: the Rise of Sustainable Development -- III. The Anthropocene: A Focus on Earth Systems -- IV. Conclusion -- 2 -- Reimagining International Environmental Law in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. Earth Systems and Planetary Boundaries -- III. International Environmental Law and Planetary Boundaries -- IV. A Reimagined International Environmental Law for the Anthropocene -- V. Conclusion -- 3 -- Doing Time-The Temporalities of Environmental Law -- I. Time and Environmental Change -- II. Governing the Future -- III. Governing the Past and its Restoration -- IV. Conclusions -- Part 2: Radical Ontologies and Epistemologiesfor the Anthropocene -- 4 -- Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Chthulucene": Re-encountering Environmental Law and its "Subject" with Haraway and New Materialism -- I. Introduction -- II. Haraway"s Framing: Three Stories -- 5 -- Critical Environmental Law and the Double Register of the Anthropocene: A Biopolitical Reading -- I. Introduction -- II. Knowledge, Nature and Law in the Anthropocene -- III. The Double Register of the Anthropocene -- IV. Biopolitics -- V. Reading Environmental Law Biopolitically -- VI. Conclusions -- 6 -- Critical Environmental Law in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. Anthropocenic Grammar -- III. Anthropocenic Theoretical Perspective -- IV. Anthropocenic Methodology: Critical Environmental Law -- V. Conclusion -- 7.

Materiality and the Ontological Turn in the Anthropocene: Establishing a Dialogue between Law, Anthropology and Eco-Philosophy -- I. Introduction: The Crisis of the Anthropocene -- II. Counter Discourse -- III. Materiality -- IV. Ontological Turn in Anthropology -- V. Knowledge and Experience in the Anthropocene -- VI. Law in the Anthropocene -- VII. Conclusion -- Part 3: Planetary Stewardship and Global Justice Reimagined -- 8 -- Global Environmental Governance in the Anthropocene: Setting and Achieving Global Goals -- I. Introduction -- II. Global Goals for the Anthropocene -- III. The Evolution of Global Goals -- IV. The Challenge of Implementation -- V. Lessons from the MDGs and Global Environmental Conventions -- VI. Conclusion -- 9 -- Global Environmental Constitutionalism in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. From Domestic to Global Constitutionalism -- III. Five Approaches to Global Environmental Constitutionalism -- IV. Seven Elements of Global Environmental Constitutionalism -- V. Conclusion -- 10 -- Global Justice in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. The Colonial and Postcolonial Origins of the Anthropocene -- III. International Economic Law and the North-South Divide -- IV. Sustainable Development: Part of the Solution or Part of the Problem? -- V. The Way Forward -- VI. Conclusion -- 11 -- The Imperative of Ecological Integrity: Conceptualising a Fundamental Legal Norm for a New "World System" in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. Jurisprudential Conceptualisations of Ecological Integrity -- III. Analysing the "World-System -- IV. Conclusion: Shaping the "New Story -- Part 4: Possible Futures in Critical 'Spaces' -- 12 -- Of Human Responsibility: Considering the Human/Environment Relationship and Ecosystems in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. The Paradigm of Mastery and its Consequences.

III. The Human/Nature Relationship and Ecosystems -- IV. Is it Possible to Reorient ESAs? A Preliminary Exploration of Rights-based Approaches -- V. Conclusion -- 13 -- The Corporation and the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. Situating Corporate Behaviour -- III. Adapting the Model of the Corporation -- IV. A Levinasian Approach to the Corporation -- V. Conclusion -- 14 -- Judging the Anthropocene: Transformative Adjudication in the Anthropocene Epoch -- I. Introduction -- II. Context: the Failure of Administrative Environmental Law -- III. The Unique Role of Judges in Global Environmental Sustainability -- IV. Civil Actions -- V. The Public Trust Doctrine -- VI. Constitutional Environmental Rights -- VII. Indigenous Environmental Law -- VIII. Conclusion -- 15 -- The Emergence of Transnational Environmental Law in the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. A Primer on Transnational Environmental Law -- III. The EU"s Quest for Sustainable Biofuels -- IV. Conclusion -- 16 -- The End of European Union Environmental Law: An Environmental Programme for the Anthropocene -- I. Introduction -- II. Phenomenological, Spatial, Temporal and Instrumental Challenges for Environmental Policy -- III. The Human versus Nature Dichotomy in EU Environmental Law -- IV. Temporal Challenges: the Retrospectivity of EU Environmental Law -- V. Conclusion -- Index.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

© 2024 Resource Centre. All rights reserved.