1st Edition

Ecological Restoration in International Environmental Law

    328 Pages
    by Routledge

    328 Pages
    by Routledge

    Human activities are depleting ecosystems at an unprecedented rate. In spite of nature conservation efforts worldwide, many ecosystems including those critical for human well-being have been damaged or destroyed. States and citizens need a new vision of how humans can reconnect with the natural environment. With its focus on the long-term holistic recovery of ecosystems, ecological restoration has received increasing attention in the past decade from both scientists and policymakers. Research on the implications of ecological restoration for the law and law for ecological restoration has been largely overlooked.

    This is the first published book to examine comprehensively the relationship between international environmental law and ecological restoration. While international environmental law (IEL) has developed significantly as a discipline over the past four decades, this book enquires whether IEL can now assist states in making a strategic transition from not just protecting and maintaining the natural environment but also actively restoring it. Arguing that states have international duties to restore, this book offers reflections on the philosophical context of ecological restoration and the legal content of a duty to restore from an international law, European Union law and national law perspective. The book concludes with a discussion of several contemporary themes of interest to both lawyers and ecologists including the role of private actors, protected areas and climate change in ecological restoration.

    1. Introduction  Part I Setting the Scene for International Law and Ecological Restoration  2. What is Ecological Restoration?  3. Why Should We Restore Nature?  Part II Ecological restoration in International Law  4. International Soft Law and Ecological Restoration  5. International Conventions and Ecological Restoration  6. The Convention on Biological Diversity and Ecological Restoration  7. Regional Approaches: Law and Policy on Ecological Restoration in the European Union  8. National Approaches to Ecological Restoration  Part III Thematic Issues on Ecological Restoration  9. Private Non-State Actors and Ecological Restoration  10. Protected Areas and Ecological Restoration  11. Climate Change and Ecological Restoration  12. Future Directions for International Law on Ecological Restoration

    Biography

    Anastasia Telesetsky is Associate Professor at the University of Idaho, US.

    An Cliquet is Associate Professor at the University of Ghent, Belgium.

    Afshin Akhtar-Khavari is Associate Professor at Griffith University, Australia.