Saturday, April 12, 2008

Climate Researcher Opportunity in HK

PLEASE FORWARD TO INTERESTED MASTER'S STUDENTS/GRADUATES/POST-DOCS A great opportunity for a young scholar to work and live in Hong Kong/China:

 

 

A New Era for Liberal Arts Education in Hong Kong

 

Lingnan University, a distinctive liberal arts institution in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), seeks to provide its students with quality education distinguished by the best liberal arts tradition from both East and West. Applications are invited for the following position, which will be tenable from June 2008 or as soon as possible thereafter:

 

Research Fellow / Research Assistant in Climate Change Policy Environmental

Studies Programme (Post Ref.: 08/36/W)

 

The University has an active research agenda on the environment and has recently set up the Environmental Studies Programme (ESP). The Programme, in collaboration with the University¹s Hong Kong APEC Study Centre, seeks an experienced and/or highly committed and proactive appointee to conduct and participate in research on environmental change, with focus on climate change policy in the Asia-Pacific region. The successful candidate will be expected to contribute independently and work closely with the Director of the ESP in conducting research, co-authoring and writing papers for publication, and other activities associated with the development and administration of research and the ESP.

 

Applicants should ideally have a postgraduate degree in International Relations, Political Science or another relevant discipline with significant research experience in environmental policy issues. Familiarity with international environmental affairs is desirable and excellent written English is essential to this position, while knowledge of climate change in the Asia-Pacific context would be highly advantageous. Applicants are invited to contact Professor Paul Harris, Director of the ESP, at tel. no.

(852) 2616-7199, fax no. (852) 2773-6546, or email pharris [AT] LN.edu.hk for further information.

 

Salary and Fringe Benefits

The monthly salary for Research Fellow will in principle be up to HK$25,000 and the monthly salary for Research Assistant is up to HK$18,800. [NOTE: The HK dollar is fixed to the US dollar. US$1 = HK$7.8.] Rank and remuneration will be commensurate with qualifications and experience. Fringe benefits, where applicable, include annual leave, medical and dental benefits, and mandatory provident fund. Initial appointment will be made on a fixed-term contract of around one-year, with a possibility of renewal subject to funding availability.

 

Application Procedure

Applicants are invited to forward a cover letter indicating research experience and relevant interests, a resume, and a personal data sheet (Form

R1) obtainable from the University¹s homepage at http://www.LN.edu.hk/hr/appform.htm, to the Human Resources Office, Lingnan University, Tuen Mun, Hong Kong by post or by fax (852) 2891-5782, or by

email: recruit@LN.edu.hk (as attachment in MS Word or PDF format).

Applications will continue to be received until the position is filled, but review of applications will begin in mid-April 2008. Please quote the reference number of the post in all correspondence. The University reserves the right not to fill the post or to fill the post by invitation or by search.

 

 

****************************************

P.G. Harris

Environmental Studies Programme

& Department of Political Science

Dorothy Y.L. Wong Building

8 Castle Peak Road

Lingnan University

Tuen Mun, HONG KONG

TEL: +852-2616-7199

FAX: +852-2616-5602

http://www.ln.edu.hk/polsci/

http://www.ln.edu.hk/ihss/info/ESP.htm

****************************************

April 12, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Friday, April 4, 2008

Call for Papers: Regional Environmental Change

Call for Submissions

Journal of Regional Environmental Change

 

For more information, please go to:

http://www.springerlink.com/content/103880/

 

Or contact the editorial office:

E-mail: rec@pik-potsdam.de

 

--------------------

The Journal of Regional Environmental Change wishes to broaden its base of authors by inviting new research communities to use its pages for high-quality publications. The journal is a young ISI-listed Springer journal and offers fast, high quality reviewing, online-first publication, and broad access to readers through numerous library subscriptions worldwide.

 

The mission of the journal is to publish scientific research and opinion papers that improve the understanding and the extent of environmental changes, their causes, their impacts on people, and the options for society to respond. Solutions are needed most at the regional level, where physical features of the landscape, biological systems, and human institutions interact.

 

The editors encourage submissions on interdisciplinary research across the natural sciences, social sciences and humanities, and on more focused studies that contribute toward solutions to complex environmental problems. Journal topics include:

- The regional manifestations of global change, especially the vulnerability of regions and sectors

- The adaptation of social-ecological systems to environmental change in the context of sustainable development

- Trans-boundary and cross-jurisdictional issues, legislative and governance frameworks, and the broad range of policy and management issues associated with building, maintaining and restoring robust social-ecological systems at regional scales.

 

Primarily, the journal accepts research articles, presenting new evidence from analyses of empirical data or theoretical investigations of regional environmental change. In addition to research articles, the journal also publishes editorials, short communications, invited mini-reviews on topics of strong current interest, as well as special features that provide multifaceted discussion of complex topics or particular regions.

 

For more information, please go to:

http://www.springerlink.com/content/103880/

 

Or contact the editorial office:

E-mail: rec@pik-potsdam.de

 

April 4, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

International Wildlife Law book

A Handbook on

International Wilderness Law and Policy

 

Now available—the first comprehensive guide to wilderness laws and policies around the world: A Handbook on International Wilderness Law and Policy, published by The WILD Foundation (Boulder, Colorado, USA) and Fulcrum Publishing (Golden, Colorado, USA).

 

This book:

  • provides      a detailed "how-to" guide for conservation professionals      interested in developing new wilderness laws or policies in their      countries; 
  • provides      the most current information to practitioners in countries where      wilderness laws and policies are already in place, but who are interested      in learning from approaches and experiences in other countries.

 

In addition to case studies of wilderness laws and policies written by leading conservationists from 12 countries and one indigenous group (the Confederated Salish and Kootenai), the book also includes a matrix allowing for easy comparison of the different wilderness definitions in use around the world.

 

This book was edited by Cyril Kormos, WILD's VP for policy, with contributions from leading wilderness policy experts from around the world. It  includes a preface by Vance Martin, president, The WILD Foundation, and Ian Player, founder, The WILD Foundation and the World Wilderness Congress, as well as a foreword by Karen Taylor-Goodrich (National Park Service) and Elena Daly (Bureau of Land Management) who are chair and vice-chair respectively of the U.S. Government's Interagency Wilderness Policy Council.

 

To order: http://www.wild.org/Store/Publications_Store.htm

 

Hardback, 6" x 9", 408 pages

Black and white photographs, Matrix of wilderness definitions in use around the world

 

Price: $39 Includes media mail shipping within the US; international and expedited shipping will incur additional charges.

 

March 26, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

IUCN Climate Change Law Conference

DRAFT CONFERENCE PROGRAM
Climate Law in Developing Countries
post-2012:
North and South Perspectives
September 26-28, 2008, at the Faculty of Law
University of Ottawa
Hosted by the IUCN Academy of Environmental Law
Supported by the Canadian International Development Agency, International Development Research Centre, University of Ottawa and York University (Osgoode Hall Law School).
Details and registration at: http://www.iucnael.org/99
Friday, September 26
PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP:
Teaching Climate Law for Developing Country Universities
1.00 pm – 5.00 pm Chaired by Teaching Committee, IUCN Academy of Environmental Law
Lead participants: Robert Fowler (Australia), Wil Burns (USA)
Other participants: Prue Taylor (New Zealand), Alero Akeredolu (Nigeria), Dil Mohammad (Pakistan), Imran Akram (Pakistan), Anjum Jawid Khan (Pakistan),
Jan Glazewski (South Africa)
OPENING:
5.00 pm Registration opens (Lobby Fauteux Hall)
6.00 pm – 8.00 pm Welcome and Introductions
Keynote speaker: William Rees (Canada)
8.00 pm – 9.30 pm Reception
Atrium 3rd floor, Fauteux Hall
Saturday, September 27
8.00 am Registration opens (Lobby Fauteux Hall)
9.00 am – 9.45 am Plenary Address 1: Climate Justice and the South
Renato Redentor Constantino (Philippines)
9.45 am – 10.30 am Plenary Address 2: International Climate Law and Sustaining Development in the South
Marie-Claire Cordonier Segger (Canada)
10.30 am – 10.45 am Break
Concurrent sessions:
10.45 am – 12.15 pm Climate Justice 1: Climate Ethics and International Equity
Christina MacLeod (Canada): Climate Change Code of Ethics: Acceptance of Responsibility and United Action
Werner Scholtz (South Africa): Greenhouse Equity (Or how to Ensure a Future for Humankind without Expropriating the Poor)
Christina Voigt (Norway): The Clean Development Mechanism between Ecological Integrity and Economic Efficiency
Ana Maria de Oliveira Nusdeo (Brazil), Clean Development Mechanism and Distributional Issues: An Analysis of the Brazilian Certified Projects
Energy and Climate Change 1: Policy Frameworks
Richard Ottinger (USA): Climate Policy Energy Solutions for Developing Countries – Be Careful What You Wish For
Jeremy Firestone (USA): Using Understanding of Existing Carbon-free Technologies to Facilitate Appropriate Models of Electricity Governance and Related Policy Instrument Choice
Francis Botchway (UK / Ghana): New Energy Dynamics and Africa’s Climate
Tianbao Qin (China) and Huanhuan Wang (China): Preparing for the Post-Kyoto Era: “Greening” of Energy Law in China
12.15 pm – 12.30 pm Break
12.30 pm – 2.00 pm Lunch and Plenary Address 3: Climate Change and Energy Markets
Yinka Omorogbe (Nigeria)
2.00 pm – 2.15 pm Break
Concurrent sessions:
2.15 pm – 3.45 pm The Clean Development Mechanism: Past, Present and Future
José Juan González Márquez (Mexico), The Role of Clean Development Mechanism in Promoting Alternative Sources of Energy in Mexico
Olawuyi Damilola (Canada / Nigeria): Beautifying Africa for the Clean Development Mechanism: Legal and Institutional Issues Considered
Meinhard Doelle (Canada): The CDM, a Failed Experiment or a Crucial Part of the Post 2012 Regime?
Emmanuel Kasimbazi (Uganda): Policy and Legal Interventions in the Implementation of CDM Projects in the Forestry Sector: Implications for Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation in Uganda.
Climate Justice 2: Climate Refugees
Donald K. Anton (Australia): Climate Change and the Inundation of Low-Lying Small Island Developing States: From Internally Displaced People to the Loss of Statehood
Angela Williams (UK / NZ): Achieving Justice within the International Legal System: Prospects for Climate Refugees
Laura Westra (Canada): Climate and Ecological Refugees: Beyond the 1951 Convention on the Status of Refugees
Energy and Climate Change 2: Renewable or Nuclear?
Eliamani Laltaika (Tanzania), Jatropha in Maasailand: Why, How and for Whose Benefit?
Solange Teles da Silva (Brazil) and Carolina Dutra (Brazil): Brazilian Policy of Biodiesel: Alternative to Mitigate Effects of Climate Change?
Yanti Fristikawati (Indonesia): Nuclear Power and Climate Policy in Indonesia
Muhammed Tawfiq Ladan (Nigeria): Policy, Legislative and Regulatory Challenges in Promoting Efficient and Renewable Energy for Sustainable Development and Climate Change Mitigation in Nigeria.
3.45 pm – 4.00 pm Break
4.00 pm – 5.30 pm Plenary Address 4: Indigenous Peoples and Climate Change in the South Pacific
Eric Kwa (Papua New Guinea)
Roundtable Discussion on Indigenous Peoples and Climate Change
Introduced and chaired by Brad Morse (Canada)
5.30 pm Close for the day
CONFERENCE DINNER:
7.00 pm – 10.00 pm Museum of Nature
Speaker: Mary Simon (President of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami)
Sunday, September 28
9.00 am – 9.45 am Plenary Address 5: Adaptation Mechanisms under the UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocols: Hope or Chimera for Developing Countries?
Wil Burns (USA)
9.45 am – 10.30 am Plenary Address 6: A Mechanism to Reduce Emissions from Deforestation: Key Policy Considerations
Claire Stockwell (Canada)
10.30 am – 10.45 pm Break
Concurrent sessions:
10.45 am – 12.15 pm Climate Justice 3: Rights, Responsibilities and Internal Inequities
Deepa Badrinarayana (India): Is India’s Climate Justice Stance Justified, or, Indeed, Justifiable?
Oluwatoyin Adejonwo-Osho (UK / Nigeria): The Evolution of Human Rights Approaches to Environmental Protection in Nigeria
William Onzivu (UK / Uganda): Tackling the Public Health Impact of Climate Change: The Role of Domestic Environmental Health Governance in Developing Countries
Sumudu Atapattu (Sri Lanka / USA): Climate Change, Equity and Differentiated Responsibilities: Does the Present Climate Regime Favour the Developing Countries?
Instrument Choice 1: Climate Finance and Economic Instruments
Robert Fowler (Australia): The Role of Marine "Forests" as a Carbon Sink: Eligibility and Accounting Under the Climate Change Regime
Kate Miles (Australia): Investing in Adaptation: Financing Climate Change Adaptation Measures in Developing States
Benjamin J. Richardson (Canada): Socially Responsible Investment and Climate Finance
Carolina Mauri (Costa Rica): Costa Rica Undertakes a Voluntary Commitment to Become Carbon Neutral
Protection of Biological and Social Systems 1: Oceans, Forests, Pastureland and Biodiversity
Robin Warner (Australia): Preserving a Balanced Ocean: Environmental Regulation of Climate Change Mitigation Activities in Developing Countries.
Ian Hannam (Australia): Environmental Law Reform in Mongolia and Climate Change.
Rosemary Lyster (Australia): Approaches to Recognising Carbon Offsets Arising from Avoided Deforestation in Developing Countries.
Claudio Torres Nachón (Mexico / Canada): Reduced Deforestation and Degradation in Protected Areas: Legal Issues for Harnessing Forest Biological Diversity and Mitigation of Climate Change
12.15 pm – 12.30 pm Break
12.30 pm – 2.00 pm Lunch and Plenary Address 7: The North-South Dimension of Climate Policy in the European Union and Norway?
Hans Christian Bugge (Norway)
2.00 pm – 2.15 pm Break
Concurrent sessions:
2.15 pm – 3.45 pm Instrument Choice 2: North-South Interactions
Marjan Peeters (Netherlands): Improving Citizen Responsibility in the North and its Consequences for the South
Francesco Sindico (UK): Climate and Trade in a Divided World: Can Measures Adopted in the North End Up Shaping Climate Legislative Frameworks in the South?
Peter Lawrence (Australia): Kick Starting the Climate Change Technology Revolution: The Potential - and Limitations - of Asia-Pacific Partnerships for Technology Development and Transfer.
Protection of Biological and Social Systems 2: The Challenge of Adaptation
Kees Bastmeijer (Netherlands) and Jonathan Verschuuren (Netherlands): Adaptation to Climate Change to Save Biodiversity: Lessons Learnt from African and European Experiences
Stefan Gruber (Germany / Australia): How can Environmental Law Be Used to Decrease the Effects of Global Climate Change on Cultural Heritage Sites?
Jolene Lin (China): Supporting Adaptation Strategies in Developing Countries at the National and Global Levels.
Carl Bruch (USA) and Jessica Troell (USA): Adaptive Water Management: Strengthening Laws and Institutions to Cope with Climate Change.
Post-2012 Challenges and Strategies
David Hodas (USA) and Albert Mumma (Kenya): Adapting to Climate Change: An Analysis of the Legal and Policy Adaptations Necessary for Clean Development in Developing Countries.
Horacio Payá (Argentina): International Climate Policy and Developing Countries’ National Development Challenges: A Necessary Link for a Successful International Agreement.
Harro van Asselt and Joyeeta Gupta (Netherlands): Stretching too Far? Developing Countries and the Role of Flexibility Mechanisms Beyond 2012
Neil Craik (Canada) and Joseph F.C. DiMento (USA): Multi-level and Multi-track Climate Law and Policy in North America: Implications for Developing Countries
3.45 pm – 4.00 pm Break
4.00 pm – 4.45 pm Plenary Address 8: From Berlin to Bali and Beyond: The Role of Developing Countries in the Structuring of the Climate Regime
Lavanya Rajamani (India)
4.45 pm - 5.30 pm Closing remarks and reflections
Speakers: TBA

March 26, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

New Issue of CCLR: Focus on Trade Interface

 

We are pleased to announce the publication of a special issue of the Carbon & Climate Law Review [CCLR]:

 

Climate Change in a Global Economy

Legal Implications for International Trade, Investment and the Carbon Market

 

While trade ministers engage in a debate on the relationship of climate change and trade liberalization, and border adjustments for carbonintensive products are discussed in Brussels and Washington, questions of international economic law, investment regulation and free trade are rapidly gaining currency. Featuring a group of recognized experts and a preface by the DirectorGeneral of the World Trade Organization, this special issue of the Carbon & Climate Law Review provides a timely analysis of the challenging nexus between international trade law and the climate regime.

 

 

 

Table of Contents

Volume 2 | Number 1

 

 

Preface

Pascal Lamy, DirectorGeneral, World Trade Organization, Geneva

 

Editorial

Joost Pauwelyn, Professor, Graduate Institute for International Studies, Geneva

Francesco Sindico, Lecturer, School of Law, University of Surrey

 

Articles

 

Heating Up International Trade Law: Challenges and Opportunities Posed by Efforts to Combat Climate Change (reading sample)

Richard G. Tarasofsky, Counsel, Trade Law Bureau, Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada

 

French Ideas on Climate and Trade Policies

Jochem Wiers, Counsellor, Netherlands Embassy, Paris

 

Border Tax Adjustments and Emissions Trading: The Implications of International Trade Law for Policy Design

Matthew Genasci, Attorney, New York

 

Maximum Carbon Intensity Limitations and the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade

Charles Owen Verrill, Partner, Wiley Rein, Washington, D.C.; Senior Lecturing Fellow, Duke University

 

WTO Law and International Emissions Trading: Is there Potential for Conflict?

Christina Voigt, Postdoctoral Research Fellow and Lecturer, Department of Public and International Law, University of Oslo

 

Climate Change and the International Trade of Biofuels

Haroldo MachadoFilho, Special Adviser to the Interministerial Commission on Global Climate Change, Brazil

 

Will the “Friends of Climate” Emerge in the WTO?

The Prospects of Applying the “Fisheries Subsidies” Model to Energy Subsidies

Sadeq Z. Bigdeli, Research Fellow, NCCR Trade Regulation, World Trade Institute, Berne

 

Against Harmonisation: Regulatory Competition in Climate Change Law

Geert van Calster, Professor, K.U. Leuven; Visiting Lecturer, Oxford University; Of Counsel, DLA Piper

 

The 'Legitimate Expectations' of Investors and the CDM:

Balancing Public Goods and Private Rights under the Climate Change Regime

Jacob D. Werksman, Director, Institutions and Governance Program, World Resources Institute; Adjunct Professor of Law, New York University and Georgetown University

 

In the Market

 

The European Emissions Trading Scheme – Coming of Age? An Assessment of the EU Commission Proposal for a Review of the Scheme

Benjamin Görlach and Olaf Hölzer-Schopohl, German Emissions Trading Authority at the Federal Environment Agency, Berlin

Hauke Hermann, Ecologic – Institute for International and European Environmental Policy, Berlin

 

Current Developments

 

International

Camilla Bausch and Michael Mehling, Ecologic – Institute for International and European Environmental Policy, Berlin/Washington, D.C.

 

European Union

Leonardo Massai, T.M.C. Asser Institute, The Hague

 

North America

Andrea Hudson Campbell, Van Ness Feldman, PC, Washington, D.C.

 

Book Reviews

 

Carlo Carraro and Christian Egenhofer (eds.): Climate and Trade Policy: Bottom-up Approaches Towards Global Agreement. Edward Elgar, 2007

Reviewed by Harro van Asselt, Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

 

The World Bank: International Trade and Climate Change: Economic, Legal and Institutional Perspectives. The World Bank, 2008

Reviewed by Eriika Melkas, Faculty of Law, University of Turku

 

New Publications

 

Compiled by Harro van Asselt, Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

 

Event Calendar

 

 

This special issue of the Carbon & Climate Law Review and individual articles are available electronically and in a hardcopy version from Lexxion Publishers, Berlin, at: http://www.lexxion.eu/cclr. For subscription enquiries, please contact info@lexxion.de.

Carbon & Climate Law Review, a quarterly journal on climate regulation and the carbon market, welcomes manuscript submissions for upcoming issues. Contributions should address legal aspects of carbon trading and other dimensions of greenhouse gas regulation, and will typically focus on the interests of practitioners or formulate legal policy recommendations. Research articles can range anywhere from 3.500-6.500 words in length, and commentaries on recent judicial decisions, new legislation, and other developments from 1.500 to 2.500 words.

 

Every issue of the Carbon & Climate Law Review contains general articles and a section devoted to a particular thematic area. Upcoming issues will focus on current developments in the United States and Canada (2/2008), the role of forestry in the climate regime (3/2008), and legal aspects of the Clean Development Mechanism (4/2008). If you are interested in submitting a manuscript or have any questions, kindly contact the editor at the address below for further information on the editorial process, the guidelines for authors, and submission deadlines for future issues.

 

Please feel free to forward this message to interested colleagues.
 
________________________________

 

Michael A. Mehling

Editor

Carbon & Climate Law Review [CCLR]

Lexxion Publishing

Güntzelstr. 63

10717 Berlin

Germany


Tel.: +49 (0) 30 814 506 00

Fax: +49 (0) 30 814 506 22
mehling@lexxion.de

 

Carbon & Climate Law Review
A Journal on Climate Regulation and the Carbon Market

Emerging responses to climate change necessitate recourse to legal mechanisms for adequate implementation, with implications ranging from legislative decision-making to judicial litigation. As the only journal devoted to the legal dimensions of climate change, the Carbon & Climate Law Review [CCLR] provides academics and practitioners with a forum for this important debate. For further information on this journal and online access to sample content, please visit www.lexxion.eu/cclr.

March 26, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Monday, March 17, 2008

10th IWLC Redux

The Annual International Wildlife Law Conference, now in its tenth year, was held in

Granada

,

Spain

on 6 and 7 March 2008, attracting a host of leading specialists in this field drawn from both sides of the

Atlantic

. The first day of the Conference considered the operationalisation of the precautionary principle in international wildlife conservation and management regimes and the practical measures taken to address climate change taken through fisheries and wildlife management organisations, demonstrating progress (and impediments to it) experienced to date through a series of practical case studies. The second day of the Conference took on a decidedly more marine approach, examining the current status and future development of marine protected areas, followed by an examination of key aspects of the vexed issue of cetacean conservation regimes. The Conference closed with a keynote address by Professor David VanderZwaag, examining the inconsistent progress made to date in applying the precautionary principle/approach to fisheries management. Many of the papers growing out of the conference will be published in a special symposium issue of the Journal of International Wildlife Law & Policy, www.jiwlp.com.

The Eleventh installment of this Conference will be convened in March 2009 at

Stetson

University's School of Law

in Gulfport,

Florida

; a call for papers for this event will be issued shortly. Please contact the conference's coordinator, Dr. Wil Burns, wburns@scu.edu, to be placed on the mailing list.

March 17, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Voluntary Carbon Markets Assessment

Dear all,

WWF has just published a new report on "Making Sense of the Voluntary Carbon Market - A Comparison of Carbon Offset Standards".

The study has been written by Anja Kollmuss and Clifford Polycarp from the Stockholm Environment Institute and Helge Zink from Tricorona.

The report discusses the role of the voluntary carbon offset market. It provides an overview and guide to the most important currently available standards, using the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) as a benchmark. The report compares the standards side-by-side and outlines the most pertinent aspects of each. It also includes a handy one page reference table for a quick comparison of the standards. The evaluated standards are:

• Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)
• Gold Standard (GS)
• Voluntary Carbon Standard 2007 (VCS 2007)
• VER+
• Voluntary Offset Standard (VOS)
• Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX)
• Climate, Community & Biodiversity Standards (CCBS)
• Plan Vivo System
• ISO 14064-2
• GHG Protocol for Project Accounting

WWF's press release and guidelines around the report can be found at: http://www.panda.org/about_wwf/what_we_do/climate_change/index.cfm?uNewsID=126700.
The report and the executive summary can also be downloaded from SEI-US’s website:  http://www.sei-us.org/offset_standard_report.html

We hope you find it interesting!

Juliette de Grandpré
Energy and Carbon Markets
WWF Germany
Große Präsidentenstr. 10
D-10178 Berlin
degrandpre@wwf.de

Anja Kollmuss

Associate Scientist

Stockholm Environment Institute - US

11 Curtis Avenue
Somerville, MA 02144-1224, USA

Tel:  +1 (617) 627-3786 8#
Fax: +1 (617) 449-9603

www.sei-us.org

 

SEI is an independent research affiliate of Tufts University

March 15, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

New Issue: IEL Agreements

We are pleased to deliver your requested table of contents alert for International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics.

Volume 8 Number 1 of International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics is now available on the SpringerLink web site at http://springerlink.com

By clicking on the URLs below you can access the abstracts for each article.

   
 

 
 

In this issue:

 

 

                                   
 

 
 

Original Paper

 
 

 
 

Local causes,   regional co-operation and global financing for environmental problems: the   case of Southeast Asian Haze pollution

 
 

 
 

Author(s)

 
 

 
 

Luca Tacconi,   Frank Jotzo, R. Quentin Grafton

 
 

DOI

 
 

 
 

10.1007/s10784-007-9057-z

 
 

Online since

 
 

 
 

September 29, 2007

 
 

Page

 
 

 
 

1 - 16

 
 

 

                                   
 

 
 

Original Paper

 
 

 
 

Trade and   environment negotiations in the WTO: Asian perspectives

 
 

 
 

Author(s)

 
 

 
 

Yohei Harashima

 
 

DOI

 
 

 
 

10.1007/s10784-007-9058-y

 
 

Online since

 
 

 
 

December 05, 2007

 
 

Page

 
 

 
 

17 - 34

 
 

 

                                   
 

 
 

Original Paper

 
 

 
 

European air   pollution assessments: co-production of science and policy

 
 

 
 

Author(s)

 
 

 
 

Willemijn Tuinstra

 
 

DOI

 
 

 
 

10.1007/s10784-008-9064-8

 
 

Online since

 
 

 
 

February 01, 2008

 
 

Page

 
 

 
 

35 - 49

 
 

 

                                   
 

 
 

Original Paper

 
 

 
 

Drivers for   adopting environmental management systems in the post-Soviet mining industry

 
 

 
 

Author(s)

 
 

 
 

Olli Salmi

 
 

DOI

 
 

 
 

10.1007/s10784-007-9046-2

 
 

Online since

 
 

 
 

July 18, 2007

 
 

Page

 
 

 
 

51 - 77

 
 

 

                                   
 

 
 

Book Review

 
 

 
 

Scott Barrett,   Environment & Statecraft: The Strategy of Environmental Treaty-Making

 
 

 
 

Author(s)

 
 

 
 

Jamie F. Morgan

 
 

DOI

 
 

 
 

10.1007/s10784-007-9032-8

 
 

Online since

 
 

 
 

October 31, 2007

 
 

Page

 
 

 
 

79 - 81

 
 

 

                                   
 

 
 

Book Review

 
 

 
 

Philippe G. Le   Prestre (ed.), Governing Global Biodiversity: The Evolution and   Implementation of the Convention on Biological Diversity

 
 

 
 

Author(s)

 
 

 
 

Pamela McElwee

 
 

DOI

 
 

 
 

10.1007/s10784-007-9055-1

 
 

Online since

 
 

 
 

September 01, 2007

 
 

Page

 
 

 
 

83 - 85

 
 

 

                                   
 

 
 

Book Review

 
 

 
 

Carraro, Carlo and   François Lévêque (Eds), Voluntary Approaches in Environmental Policy

 
 

 
 

Author(s)

 
 

 
 

Lada Kochtcheeva Dunbar

 
 

DOI

 
 

 
 

10.1007/s10784-007-9045-3

 
 

Online since

 
 

 
 

July 18, 2007

 
 

Page

 
 

 
 

87 - 90

 
 

 

                                 
 

 
 

Book Review

 
 

 
 

Jon Birger   Skjærseth and Tora Skodvin, Climate Change and the Oil Industry: Common   Problem, Varying Strategies

 
 

 
 

Author(s)

 
 

 
 

Jerry Hinkle,   Armin Rosencranz

 
 

DOI

 
 

 
 

10.1007/s10784-007-9056-0

 
 

Online since

 
 

 
 

August 29, 2007

 
 

Page

 
 

 
 

91 - 94

 

March 12, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

New article on governance and networks

Alkoby on International Environmental Lawmaking

Asher Alkoby (Ryerson University) has posted Global Networks and International Environmental Lawmaking: A Discourse Approach (Chicago Journal of International Law, Vol. 8, No. 2, 2008) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

    The concept of networks is gaining currency in the study of global politics and international law. The term usually refers to a loose organization of nonstate actors characterized by voluntary, reciprocal, and horizontal patterns of communication and exchange. This Article explores the direct and indirect participation of global networks in international environmental decisionmaking fora, as a matter of both practice and aspiration. While in agreement with the view that global networks improve the democratic quality of international environmental institutions, this Article advances a particular conception of democratic governance, one that is more useful for understanding the role of networks in international rule creation and enforcement, as well as for assessing their operational effectiveness. Under the proposed discourse approach, the essence of democracy is deliberation rather than voting, preference aggregation, or self-government. The interaction of civil society in the public sphere, the realm of network activity, is likely to produce norms that will be legitimate in the eyes of their addressees because such interaction is typically nonhierarchical and unconstrained by power imbalances. The institutional discursive framework, in turn, is where the communicative appeal of the ideas that networks seek to advance can be tested. In the area of international environmental governance, much of this discursive activity takes place within intergovernmental institutions, which have been gradually opening up to the input provided by networks of nonstate actors.

    The Article's discussion begins by outlining the discourse approach and explaining why it is arguably superior to the alternatives, especially in the global context where preference aggregation is not a viable option. The Article then turns to examine the involvement of environmental and business networks in the climate debate, demonstrating how patterns of discursive interaction may be observed both within each network and in the ways in which these networks attempt to channel their respective agendas into the institutional deliberation. Finally, this Article argues that the proposed conceptual schema is also useful in responding to commentators who are critical of global networks' involvement in environmental lawmaking. These critics claim that global networks are not legitimate international actors because they answer to no one in their power wielding political activity. Under a discourse approach, the legitimacy of networks both environmental and business lies in their ability to infuse the institutional debate with different policy perspectives and arguments, out of which well-informed, consensual decisions may be reached. The Article concludes by pointing to some of the implications flowing from a discourse approach for institutional design.

Posted by Lawrence Solum on March 10, 2008 at 12:19 AM in Environmental Ethics, Law, and Politics | Permalink

March 11, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Monday, March 10, 2008

New article on the ECHR and the Environment

Dear All

My article on "the European  Court of Human Rights and the Right to the Environment" is just published in Ankara Law Review which is available at the following online

http://ankara.edu.tr/journals/alr (click the issue Vol. 4 No 1 Summer 20007)

I will appreciate if you let me know your comments.

best regards

Nükhet Yılmaz Turgut

March 10, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Ocean Atlas

FYI. This is an excellent resource on ocean issues. Check out the contents of the latest issue below. One can subscribe to updates.

     
 

NEWSLETTER MARCH 2008