Transnational environmental regulation and governance : purpose, strategies, and principles /

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Heyvaert, Veerle (Author)
Corporate Author: ProQuest (Firm)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to this title online (unlimited simultaneous users allowed; 325 uses per year)
Table of Contents:
  • Machine generated contents note: 1. Transformation of Environmental Regulation
  • 1.1. Quest for the Identity of Transnational Environmental Regulation
  • 1.2. Drivers of Transnational Environmental Regulation
  • 1.3. Introduction to TER: The Case of Chemicals Control
  • 1.4. Explanation of the Chosen Approach
  • 1.5. Transformation of Environmental Regulation: An Overview
  • 2. Concept of Transnational Environmental Regulation
  • 2.1. Law and Regulation
  • 2.2. When Are Law and Regulation Transnational?
  • 2.3. Regulation in an Era of Transnational Governance
  • 2.4. Five Continents of TER
  • 2.4.1. Public TER
  • 2.4.2. Private TER
  • 2.4.3. Hybrid TER
  • 2.5. Towards a Model of Transnational Environmental Regulation
  • 3. Why Regulate beyond the State?
  • 3.1. Why Regulate?
  • 3.2. Why Regulate Transnationally?
  • 3.3. Intentions of Transnational Environmental Regulators
  • 3.3.1. Overcoming Governance Challenges of National Environmental Regulation
  • 3.3.2. Trade Facilitation
  • 3.3.3. Addressing the State's Failure to Regulate
  • 3.3.4. Risk Management
  • 3.3.5. Enhancing the Effectiveness of Environmental Regulation and Governance
  • 3.4. Learning from the Regulator's Intentions
  • 4. Strategies for Environmental Regulation: The Recursive Activities of Regulation
  • 4.1. Transformation of Environmental Regulatory Strategies
  • 4.1.1. Transformation of Regulatory Strategies: Development of the Standard Account
  • 4.1.2. Standard Account and Its Consequences
  • 4.2. Activity-Based Model of Regulatory Strategy
  • 4.3. Recursive Activities of Regulation
  • 4.3.1. Defining Regulatory Goals
  • 4.3.2. Normalisation
  • 4.3.3. Engagement: Communication, Bonding and Facilitation
  • 4.3.4. Learning
  • 4.3.5. Response
  • 4.4. Standard Account Retold
  • 4.5. Strengths of the Activity-Based Model of Regulation
  • 5. Activity-Based Model for TER Strategies Illustrated in Five Easy Pieces
  • 5.1. Paris Agreement
  • 5.1.1. Goal Setting
  • 5.1.2. Normalisation
  • 5.1.3. Engagement
  • 5.1.4. Learning
  • 5.1.5. Response
  • 5.2. Fuel Quality Directive
  • 5.2.1. Goal Setting
  • 5.2.2. Normalisation
  • 5.2.3. Engagement
  • 5.2.4. Learning
  • 5.2.5. Response
  • 5.3. Carbon Neutral Protocol
  • 5.3.1. Goal Setting
  • 5.3.2. Normalisation
  • 5.3.3. Engagement
  • 5.3.4. Learning
  • 5.3.5. Response
  • 5.4. Compact of Mayors/Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy
  • 5.4.1. Goal Setting
  • 5.4.2. Normalisation
  • 5.4.3. Engagement
  • 5.4.4. Learning
  • 5.4.5. Response
  • 5.5. Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative
  • 5.5.1. Goal Setting
  • 5.5.2. Normalisation
  • 5.5.3. Engagement
  • 5.5.4. Learning
  • 5.5.5. Response
  • 5.6. Concluding Remarks
  • 6. Transformation of Environmental Regulatory Strategies
  • 6.1. Transnational Environmental Networks of Regulation
  • 6.2. Complexity of Transnational Environmental Regulation
  • 6.2.1. Rules, Standards, Allowances and Prices in TER
  • 6.2.2. Engagement Strategies
  • 6.2.3. Learning and Response in TER
  • 6.3. Revisiting Assumptions about Environmental Regulation in the Light of Regulatory Complexity
  • 6.4. Rethinking Compliance and Deterrence in the Transnational Sphere
  • 6.5. Concluding Remarks
  • 7. Transnational Environmental Regulation and the Challenge to Law
  • 7.1. TER and the Challenge to Law Illustrated
  • 7.2. Mapping the Impacts of Transnational Environmental Regulation on the Conventional Attributes of Law
  • 7.2.1. Location: Transnational Environmental Regulation and the `End of Geography'
  • 7.2.2. Source: Transnational Environmental Regulation and the Triple Challenge to the State
  • 7.2.3. Organisation: Transnational Environmental Regulation and the Dissolution of Disciplinary Divides
  • 7.2.4. Function: Transnational Environmental Regulation and the Enhanced Reflexivity of Law
  • 7.2.5. Structure: Transnational Environmental Regulation and Regime Polycentricity
  • 7.3. Responding to Transnationalisation: Reclaiming, Reconstructing or Reconceptualising Law
  • 7.3.1. Conservative and Defensive: Reclaiming Law
  • 7.3.2. Conservative and Adaptive: Reconstructing Law
  • 7.3.3. Creative and Adaptive: Reconceptualising Law
  • 7.4. Concluding Remarks
  • 8. Legal Principles for Transnational Environmental Regulation
  • 8.1. Challenges of Identifying Principles for TER
  • 8.2. TER Principles: A Deductive Approach
  • 8.2.1. International Environmental Law
  • 8.2.2. Human Rights
  • 8.2.3. Public Institutional Law: Constitutional Law, Administrative Law and International Public Law
  • 8.3. TER Principles: An Inductive Approach
  • 8.3.1. General Characteristics
  • 8.3.2. Key TER Principles
  • 8.4. Managerial Turn in TER Governance
  • 9. Environmental Regulation Transformed
  • 9.1. Identity of Transnational Environmental Regulation
  • 9.2. TER and State Regulation
  • 9.3. Transformative Impact of TER: Reflections on Authority
  • 9.4. Transformative Impact of TER: Reflections on Legitimacy
  • 9.5. Transformative Impact of TER: Reflections on Effectiveness
  • 9.6. Closing Remarks.