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Future Directions In International Environmental Law: Precaution, Integration And Non-State Actors, James Cameron
Future Directions In International Environmental Law: Precaution, Integration And Non-State Actors, James Cameron
Dalhousie Law Journal
In this, the Horace E. Read Memorial Lecture for 1995, James Cameron discusses three developments in international environmental law,-the principles of precaution and of integration and the roles of non-state actors. The precautionary principle calls for regulatory intervention to prevent environmental harm even though the risk of damage remains scientifically uncertain. A wide consensus exists in favour of a precautionary approach to environmental management and state practice is sufficient to assert the principle has attained the status of customary international law, but it remains controversial because it demands changes in practice. The principle of integration takes a holistic approach to …
Acid Rain And Ozone Layer Depletion: International Law And Regulation, Kernaghan Webb
Acid Rain And Ozone Layer Depletion: International Law And Regulation, Kernaghan Webb
Dalhousie Law Journal
Although international customary and conventional law have addressed aspects of transfrontier pollution problems for decades,' the regional and global environmental degradations which have come to the forefront in the 1980s and 1990s - acid rain, ozone depletion, and global warming, to name but three - represent new challenges to existing international law institutions and concepts. In a sense, the world has over the past two centuries gone through a period of what could be called "technological adolescence", as individuals and corporations, largely from industrialized nations, exploited the earth's resources with little if any concern for the immediate and long-term implications …