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El. knyga: Ecological Restoration in International Environmental Law

(University of Ghent, Belgium), (Griffith University, Australia), (University of Idaho, USA)
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As a result of dramatic anthropogenic harm in our lifetimes, ecologists have been actively refining the concept of ecological restoration as a practice for revitalizing, reinvigorating and bringing life back to ecosystems or parts of nature. Given climate change and more broadly the potential of the idea that planet earth is in the Anthropocene Epoch, it is now popular across a number of academic fields to talk about ecological restoration, rewilding, and more generally constructing and building novel or historically authentic ecosystems and environments. However, little has been written about the relationship between the institutions of law and the practices of ecological restoration.The Practice of Ecological Restoration in International Environmental Law fills this lacuna by making one of the first sustained contributions to exploring the way that law - in particular international and European law- contributes to the practice of ecological restoration. This book explores questions involving the potential of law to contribute to ecological restoration, including an examination of ethical, political, or moral values inherent in the concept of ecological restoration, and analyses whether the legal concept and practice of restoration challenge other procedural or substantive concepts in environmental law.This book will be of great interest to students of international environmental law, global environmental governance and conservation law, and policymakers working in the field of ecological restoration.
List of tables
vii
Acknowledgement viii
1 Introduction
1(14)
PART I Setting the scene for international law and ecological restoration
15(44)
2 What is ecological restoration?
17(21)
3 Why should we restore?
38(21)
PART II Law of ecological restoration
59(138)
4 International soft law and ecological restoration
61(22)
5 International conventions and ecological restoration
83(27)
6 The Convention on Biological Diversity and ecological restoration
110(33)
7 Regional approaches: law and policy on ecological restoration in the European Union
143(30)
8 National approaches to ecological restoration
173(24)
PART III Thematic issues on ecological restoration
197(100)
9 Private non-state actors and ecological restoration
199(21)
10 Protected areas and ecological restoration
220(43)
11 Climate change and ecological restoration
263(23)
12 Future directions for law on ecological restoration
286(11)
Bibliography 297(18)
Index 315
Anastasia Telesetsky is Associate Professor at the University of Idaho, US.



An Cliquet is Associate Professor at the University of Ghent, Belgium.



Afshin Akhtar-Khavari is Associate Professor at Griffith University, Australia.