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Environmental Law Across Cultures Kirk W. Junker (University of Cologne, Germany)

Environmental Law Across Cultures By Kirk W. Junker (University of Cologne, Germany)

Environmental Law Across Cultures by Kirk W. Junker (University of Cologne, Germany)


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Summary

This book provides a practical, functional comparison among various institutions, tools, implementation practices and norms in environmental law across legal cultures.

Environmental Law Across Cultures Summary

Environmental Law Across Cultures: Comparisons for Legal Practice by Kirk W. Junker (University of Cologne, Germany)

This book provides a practical, functional comparison among various institutions, tools, implementation practices and norms in environmental law across legal cultures.

This is a new approach that focuses on the act of comparison, looking at legal practice, from the ground up, including the perspective of citizens. Most literature on comparative environmental law either focuses on a two-way comparison of state jurisdictions or simply juxtaposes environmental features of two or more state jurisdictions without engaging in any analysis of the comparison. However, this book treats legal cultures as the objects of comparison as it provides practical comparisons among various institutions, tools and norms in environmental law. The arrangement and organisation of the material reverses the more traditional presentation of comparative environmental law as a series of countries within which separate descriptions are respectively presented. In this book the reader is presented with environmental legal themes, with examples and case studies drawn from various cultures that are compared in order to help understand the theme. Case studies draw on the authors' experiences in a range of legal cultures, including in Australia, Brazil, China, Chile, Ethiopia, Germany, India, Nigeria, Slovakia, and the USA. The comparative nature of the book allows domestic professionals to develop skills to enable them to understand and advocate broader contexts for clients, and helps students become more aware of specific legal systems while questioning why their own system functions (or does not function) as it does.

The book is aimed at advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students of environmental law as well as researchers and practitioners.

Environmental Law Across Cultures Reviews

Contrasting the functions of various actors and tools across a myriad of legal contexts, these authors present striking insights impacting legal cultures. The role of the citizen in law and the act of comparison in legal analysis are both key to untangling the threads of environmental responses. Offering an excellent range of environmental analyses, this book is a timely comparative tool to understand evolving environmental good governance. Practitioners, students, and a wide range of readers will find it an important contribution to gaining a deeper grasp of complex environmental legal themes. - Elizabeth Burleson, Co-Editor, Comparative Environmental Law and Regulation

Whether a student, a lecturer, practising attorney, an expert, or indeed just someone with a genuine interest you will find this text a profound study in comparative environmental law. This book goes way beyond comparing written norms and differences in practices, to include in its focus the fact that law in every societal circumstance is born of a concrete culture and its contents is therefore a consequent of the same. This text is at once historical and contemporary; covers from Canada to Chile and from India to Ethiopia and many others in between in its impressive geo-legal span. It makes the study of comparative environmental law very real through inter alia consideration of decided cases from different local, national and federal judiciaries in dissimilar legal systems in many parts of the world. From customary to statutory laws, and from constitutional principles to specific environmental laws of various countries are compared and contrasted not merely in search of differences and similarity; but to point out how justice is reasoned, defined and delivered based on history, culture, the requirements of modern life vis a vis the protection of the environment, and the meeting of human needs. - Dr. Richard A. Byron-Cox, International Law Specialist, Diplomat & Expert on Sustainable Development, United Nations

This book is a refreshing and much-needed contribution to the area of comparative environmental law. It does not shy away from taking on the complex task of comparing the approach and practice of environmental law across contrasting legal cultures. The uniqueness of this book lies in its ability to effectively combine academic rigor and depth with learning from the practice of environmental law in different cultures as many authors are also practitioners from countries as diverse as India, China, and Germany to name a few. This is a must-have for anybody working or researching environmental law in diverse legal and political contexts. - Arpitha Kodiveri, Hans Kelsen Fellow at the European University Institute's Department of Law


Offering an excellent range of environmental analyses, this book is a timely comparative tool to understand evolving environmental good governance. Practitioners, students, and a wide range of readers will find it an important contribution to gaining a deeper grasp of complex environmental legal themes. - Elizabeth Burleson, Co-Editor, Comparative Environmental Law and Regulation

Whether a student, a lecturer, practising attorney, an expert, or indeed just someone with a genuine interest you will find this text a profound study in comparative environmental law. This book goes way beyond comparing written norms and differences in practices, to include in its focus the fact that law in every societal circumstance is born of a concrete culture and its contents is therefore a consequent of the same. - Dr. Richard A. Byron-Cox, International Law Specialist, Diplomat & Expert on Sustainable Development, United Nations

This book is a refreshing and much-needed contribution to the area of comparative environmental law. The uniqueness of this book lies in its ability to effectively combine academic rigor and depth with learning from the practice of environmental law in different cultures. This is a must-have for anybody working or researching environmental law in diverse legal and political contexts. - Arpitha Kodiveri, Hans Kelsen Fellow at the European University Institute's Department of Law

About Kirk W. Junker (University of Cologne, Germany)

Kirk W. Junker is Professor of Law, Director of the Environmental Law Center, and Director of the International Master of Environmental Sciences Programme, Faculty of Law, University of Cologne, Germany.

Table of Contents

Part I Comparison 1. Why Compare? The Biological, Cognitive and Social Functions of Comparison for the Human 2. A Taxonomy of Comparison: The Accessus ad auctores Part II Institutions and Bodies of Environmental Legislation, Implementation and Dispute Resolution 3. Locating Environmental Law Functions Among Legislative, Judicial and Implementation Bodies 4. Resolution of Environmental Disputes Part III Norms and Tools of Environmental Legislation, Implementation and Dispute Resolution 5. Constitutional Provisions 6. The Interface Between Law and Politics Part IV Persons Subject to Environmental Law 7. Public Participation 8. Economic Choices Enabled by Environmental Law 9. Environmental Impact Assessment Systems 10. Environmental Crime and Enforcement 11. Conclusions Across Cultures

Additional information

NLS9780367028268
9780367028268
0367028263
Environmental Law Across Cultures: Comparisons for Legal Practice by Kirk W. Junker (University of Cologne, Germany)
New
Paperback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2019-12-24
276
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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