Solutions to environmental problems require international cooperation,
but global environmental treaty-making efforts, including the 1992
U.N.-sponsored Earth Summit in Brazil, have not accomplished much.
International cooperation has been hampered by the conflicts between
the developed nations of the North and the developing nations of the
South; by the fact that science cannot accurately predict when or how
environmental threats will materialize; and by the problem that the
United Nations treaty-making system was never meant to handle threats
to the environment. Lawrence Susskind looks at the weaknesses of the
existing system of environmental treaty-making and the increasing role
of non-governmental interests in environmental diplomacy.
_Environmental Diplomacy_ argues for "nearly self-enforcing"
agreements that ensure compliance without threatening sovereignty and
maintains that new institutional arrangements are within reach.
Susskind builds on the work of the Program on Negotiation at the
Harvard Law School and the International Environmental Negotiation
Network to offer guidelines for more effective global agreements that
provide for sustainable development.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780195360462
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter