Environmental Damage in International and Comparative Law

Subjects:
Environmental Law
Contents:
Michael Bowman, The Definition and Valuation of Environmental Harm
Alan Boyle, Reparation for Environmental Damage in International Law - Some Preliminary Problems
Nick Hanley, The Economic Value of Environmental Damage
Michael Bowman, "" Intrinsic Value"" and Biological Diversity
Ruth Mackenzie, Environmental Damage and Living Modified Organisims
Gunther Handl, Indigenous Peoples' Lifestyle as an Environmental Valuation Problem
Mojtaba Kazazi Environmental Damage in the Practice of the UN Compensation Commission
John Woodliffe, Environmental Damage and Environmental Impact Assessment
Louise De La Fayette, The Concept of Environmental Damage in International Liability Regimes
David Ong, The Relationship Between Environmental Damage and Pollution - Marine Oil Pollution Laws in Malasia and Singapore
Tom Schoenbaum, Environmental Damages in Common Law
Peter Wetterstein, Environmental Damage in the Legal Systems of the Nordic Countries and Germany
Malgosia Fitzmaurice, Civil Law Approaches to Environmental Damage - Poland
Donald Reid, Definition and Valuation of Environmental Damage - The Contribution of the Scottish Legal System
Etienne Sinatambou, The Approach of Mixed Legal Systems - The Case of Mauritius
Nukhet Turgut, Definition and Valuation of Environmental Damage in Turkey
Susanna Vieira, Environmental Damage and Valuation in Brazil
Winston Anderson, Caribbean Environmental Damage and Valuation
Edward Brans, The EC White Paper on Environment Liability and the Recovery of Damages for Injury to Public Natural Resources.

ISBN13: 9780199255733
ISBN: 0199255733
Published: June 2004
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Binding: Hardback
Price: £79.95

This study considers the problems of defining and valuing ""environmental damage"" from the perspective of international and comparative law. The need for a broad and systematic evaluation of this issue is illustrated by the number of topics on the international law-making agenda to which it is relevant, including the UN Compensation Commission's decisions on compensation for environmental losses suffered by Kuwait in the Gulf War, nuclear and oil pollution liability regimes, the development of an environmental liability protocol to the Antarctic Treaty and other agreements on bio-safety and genetically modified organisms. It is thus an important element in contemporary efforts to strengthen legal remedies for environmental harm which does not necessarily come within traditional categories of legally protected personal or property rights. The contributors include experts in national and international law, civil and common law, as well as in the laws of developed and developing states, an economist and a member of the UN Compensation Commission.