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Informationen zum Autor Christina Voigt is a professor in the Department of Public and International Law, University of Oslo, Norway, where she works in particular on legal issues of climate change, sustainability and the interface between environmental and trade law. Klappentext Questions the doctrinal construction of environmental law and looks for innovative legal approaches to ecological sustainability. Zusammenfassung Current environmental laws on all levels are largely unable to ensure ecological sustainability. Instead! new ideas and dimensions of law are needed. This book marks a shift from a purely human-centered concept of law towards a legal concept of a 'rule of law for nature' which recognizes ecological realities. Inhaltsverzeichnis Part I. Environmental Law at the Cross-Roads: Achievements, Shortcomings and Challenges: 1. Twelve fundamental challenges in environmental law: an introduction to the concept of rule of law for nature Hans Christian Bugge; 2. Rule of law for nature in a kaleidoscopic world Edith Brown Weiss; 3. Evolved norms: a canon for the anthropocene Nicholas A. Robinson; Part II. A Rule of Law for Nature: Theories and Reflection: 4. Grounding the rule of law Klaus Bosselmann; 5. The rule of nature's law Cormac Cullinan; Part III. Designing a Rule of Law for Nature: New Dimensions and Ideas: 6. Eco-logical proportionality - an emerging principle of law for nature? Gerd Winter; 7. Sustainable development and the rule of law for nature: a constitutional reading Louis Kotze; 8. The principle of sustainable development: integration and ecological integrity Christina Voigt; 9. The need to recognize a coherent legal system as an important element of the ecosystem approach Froukje M. Platjouw; 10. An emerging legal principle to restore large scale ecoscapes Anastasia Telesetsky; 11. Traditional norms and environmental law: the sub-Saharan African case study Chinweze Chizoba, Jideani Chukwuemeka and Gwen Z. Abiola-Oloke; Part IV. Nature's Rights: 12. Rules of law for nature's use and nonuse Jan G. Laitos; 13. Realizing nature's rule of law through rights of waterways Linda Sheehan; Part V. Procedural Dimensions of a Rule for Law for Nature: 14. Towards a new instrument for promoting sustainability beyond the EIA and SIA: the Holistic Impact Assessment Massimiliano Montini; 15. Enforcing environmental responsibilities. An environmental perspective on the rule of law and administrative enforcement Annika K. Nilsson; 16. Mechanisms for reviewing compliance with international environmental law open to private parties Christina Verones; Part VI. Rule of Law for Nature and the Role of Companies and Markets: 17. The green economy will not build the rule of law for nature Rebecca M. Bratspies; 18. Taking nature seriously: can the UN guiding principles tame corporate profiteering? Surya Deva; Part VII. A Rule of Law for the Oceans: 19. Conservation of marine biodiversity and the International Maritime Organization Tore Henriksen; 20. Implementing the rule of law for nature in the Global Marine Commons: developing environmental assessment frameworks Robin Warner; 21. Using the public trust doctrine to achieve ocean stewardship Mary Turnipseed, Michael C. Blumm, Duncan E. J. Currie, Kristina M. Gjerde, Peter Sand, Mary C. Wood, Julie A. Hambrook Berkman, Ryke Longest, Gail Osherenko, Stephen E. Roady, Raphael D. Sagarin and Larry B. Crowder....