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El. knyga: Ecological Sustainability and the Law: The European Green Deal and the New Frontiers of Sustainability

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This book explores the emergence of ecological sustainability as a new EU policy and legal objective, distinct and autonomous from sustainable development. It argues that sustainability can no longer be conflated into sustainable development only, but should rather be represented as a plural construction, in which ecological sustainability coexists next to sustainable development. While the latter orientates most of the regulatory measures stemming from the Green Deal, the former is playing an increasingly relevant role in a number of legislative initiatives. The volume considers whether and how the EU legislator is exploiting the new opportunities brought forth by the redefinition of sustainability. To do so, a thematic approach is adopted and the inquiry is organized in five different parts, each devoted to one specific transition triggered by the European Green Deal. Navigating the dynamics of the many transitions occurring in the horizon of European climate neutrality, key chapters shed light on the EU regulatory schemes through which ecological sustainability is in the process of being operationalized and critically discuss their points of strength, weaknesses and underlying tensions. In doing so, they provide an overview of the legal changes occurring in areas of topical interest such as agri-food, energy, digitalization, corporate governance and intellectual property, as well as a number of insights on the relevance of ecological sustainability for the internal dynamism of the European Green Deal. This extensive and innovative appraisal of the field will prove a stimulating read for academics, researchers and advanced students interested in the new ecological law stemming from the Green Deal, the changing features of sustainability and the relevance of the Green Deal as a regulatory project.



This book explores the emergence of ecological sustainability as a new EU policy and legal objective, distinct and autonomous from sustainable development. It provides an overview of the legal changes occurring in topical areas such as agri-food, energy, digitalization, corporate governance and intellectual property.

Foreword; Introduction: Sustainability in Transition; Part 1: The
Agri-Food Transition;
1. Sustainability in the Agri-Food Sector: The Tortuous
Path of Common Agriculture Policy towards a Food System Approach;
2. The New
Common Agricultural Policy Approach Towards the Livestock Sector and Food
Waste. Lying at Which Point of the Sustainability Continuum? Part 2: The
Energy Transition;
3. The Quest for a Sustainable Energy Transition: The Case
of Bioenergy;
4. Reshaping Administrative Proceedings and Discretion for a
Fast-Forwarded Energy Transition;
5. Energy Transition and Sustainability
before Courts: The Evolution of the Case-Law of Italian Administrative
Courts;
6. Powering the Smart City: Sustainable Energy in the New Smart City;
Part 3: The Ecological Transition;
7. From Natura to Nature Restoration. The
Ecological Objective of the Green Deal at the Legal Litmus Test;
8. Nature
Restoration Law: Reshaping Sustainable Development?
9. Serving Sustainability
through Criminal Law: The Italian Case; Part 4: The Digital Transition;
10.
Data-Driven Ecosystems: Competition Law as a Way to Link Sustainability and
Digitalisation;
11. Sustainable Smart Cities; Part 5: The Economic
Transition;
12. Towards a Green Deal-Oriented Intellectual Property Law?
Tackling Remedies against Abuses;
13. Sustainable Finance and Biodiversity
Protection;
14. Corporate Governance and Sustainability: Something New under
the Sun?
15. Sustainable Profit? The Green Deal Economic Transition between
Criminal Law and Corporate Social Responsibility
Edoardo Chiti is Professor of Administrative Law at the SantAnna School of Advanced Studies, Pisa. He is on the editorial board of a number of academic journals and a member of various public law societies.

Andrea Giorgi is a Ph.D. Candidate in Administrative Law at the SantAnna School of Advanced Studies, Pisa. He has been a Visiting Doctoral Researcher at the Faculty of Law of the University of Oxford.