This work offers a multidisciplinary approach to legal and policy instruments used to prevent and remedy global environmental challenges. It provides a theoretical overview of a variety of instruments, making distinctions between levels of governance (treaties, domestic law), types of instruments (market-based instruments, regulation, and liability rules), and between government regulation and private or self-regulation. The book's central focus is an examination of the use of mixes between different types of regulatory and policy instruments and different levels of governance, notably in climate change, marine oil pollution, forestry, and fisheries. The authors examine how, in practice, mixes of instruments have often been developed. This book should be read by anyone interested in understanding how interactions between different instruments affect the protection of environmental resources.
Author(s): Judith van Erp, Michael Faure, Andre Nollkaemper, & Niels Philipsen
Series: Cambridge Studies on Environment, Energy and Natural Resources Governance
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 344 (366)
Frontmatter
Contents
Figures
Tables
Contributors
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Part I | Conceptual Approaches to Smart Mixes
1 | Introduction: The Concept of Smart Mixes for Transboundary Environmental Harm
2 | 'Smart' Public-Private Complementarities in the Transnational Regulatory and Enforcement Space
3 | Smart Mixes and the Challenge of Complexity: Lessons from Global Climate Governance
4 | Smart (and Not-So-Smart) Mixes of New Environmental Policy Instruments
Part II | Fisheries and Forestry
5 | The Pursuit of Good Regulatory Design Principles in International Fisheries Law: What Possibility of Smarter International Regulation?
6 | Mixing Regional Fisheries Management and Private Certification
7 | RFMO-MSC Smart Regulatory Mixes for Transboundary Tuna Fisheries
8 | Smart Mixes in Forest Governance
9 | Governing Forest Supply Chains: Ratcheting up or Squeezing out?
10 | Public Sector Engagement with Private Governance Programmes: Interactions and Evolutionary Effects in Forest and Fisheries Certification
Part III | Climate Change and Oil
11 | Smart Mixes, Non-State Governance and Climate Change
12 | Private Control of Public Regulation: A Smart Mix? - The Case of Greenhouse Gas Emission Reductions in the EU
13 | Smart Mixes of Civil Liability Regims for Marine Oil Pollution
14 | Regulatory Mixes in Governance Arrangements in (Offshore) Oil Production: Are They Smart?
Part IV | Concluding Remarks
Conclusion: Smart Mixes in Relation to Transboundary Environmental Harm