International Environmental Law in National Courts

International Environmental Law in National Courts
Published:
May 2002
Publisher:
BIICL
ISBN-10:
0-903067-76-5
Cover:
Paperback
Pages:
246
 
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The international community in the past 30 years has increasingly been concerned with the protection of the environment. This concern has seen the emergence of rules of customary international law and the adoption of several treaties to deal with environmental issues. This book analyses the role played by national courts in the application of this corpus of rules.

National courts have played a significant role for the promotion and application of human rights law, but little work has been done to analyse whether a similar role has been played, or could be played, in the field of international environmental law. This publication aims at filling this gap and is the result of a comparative study initiated in 1996 by the American Society's International Law's Interest Group in International Environmental Law (ASIL-IELIG).

The rationale of the study, its relationship to existing scholarship, the criteria for case selection, and a summary of the project?s findings are found in Daniel Bodansky and Jutta Brunnèe?s introduction. In the following twelve chapters various contributors analyse the role played by international environmental law in the national courts of a broad range of jurisdictions: Australia, Canada, the European Union, Germany, Ghana, Hungary, India, Italy, the Netherlands, Switzerland, the United States of America, the United Kingdom.

The results of this study do not paint a bright picture for the role played by national courts in the application of international environmental law, leading to the conclusion that international environmental rules are applied sporadically in national courts. The various contributors attempt to analyse and explain the reasons for such a situation, one of which has been identified as the lack of analysis and research. This book is an important contribution to raising awareness of the problem and will, it is hoped, contribute to an increased application of international environmental law by national courts.

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Editors

Michael Anderson

Michael Anderson is a Senior Fellow in International Comparative Law at the British Institute of International and Comparative Law and advisor at the Department for International Development.

Paolo Galizzi

Paolo Galizzi is Lecturer in Environmental Law at Imperial College, London.