Table of Contents
Introduction
PAOLO DAVIDE FARAH AND KIRK W. JUNKER
PART I The environment in the Global South during the globalization of "sustainable development"
1 Managing environmental risks in privately financed infrastructure projects in Nigeria
GEORGE NWANGWU
2 The curse of best practices: impact assessment in the context of the governance of extractives in Mongolia
SANCHIR JARGALSAIKHAN
3 Extra-territorial litigation remedies: a case study of the East African Crude Oil Pipeline in Uganda
XI YU
PART II Interfaces between developed and developing countries in environmental law
4 Sustainable development through environmental federalism in the case of Ethiopia
TSEGAI BERHANE GHEBRETEKLE
5 Diversification of mono-economies: how legislation manages the environmental impact of foreign investments in Nigeria
CHIDEBE MATTHEW NWANKWO AND GEORGE NWANGWU
6 Transformation of sustainable development goals in regional international organizations: vertical effects, contested indicators, and interlinkages for the
formation of environmental law
WINFRIED HUCK
7 The implementation of the Paris agreement through tax law: examples from South Africa, India, China, and Brazil
MRINALINI SHINDE
PART III Alternatives to globalization in environmental law
8 The contracting state’s role in the energy community to build the European Union’s envisioned sustainable future
TAMUNA BERIDZE
9 Global environmental governance: a necessary pathway for sustainable development of Caribbean Small Island Developing States
RICHARD A. BYRON-COX
10 Going beyond the law: the potential and limits of public participation in the context of sustainable development
MAREK PRITYI
11 Environmental hazards and human rights violations: the case of Presídio Central Prison in Brazil
DANIEL NEVES PEREIRA AND STELLA EMERY SANTANA
Conclusions: indicator species and the future of environmental law
PAOLO DAVIDE FARAH AND KIRK W. JUNKER