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This panel addresses European and international environmental governance (legal, regulatory, normative) in an evolving political context of geopolitical volatility and democratic and populist backlash. It addresses this topic through different mechanisms that exist to resolve environmental conflicts and tackle non-implementation of environmental obligations beyond the nation state. Such mechanisms range from 'soft governance' to legally binding and sometimes even enforceable decisions. They include, but are not limited to, judicial proceedings and legal judgments by European and international courts and tribunals, more cooperative or managerial non-compliance mechanisms (NCMs), and other ways of dealing with environmental obligations and resolving implementation issues as part of international treaties, supranational law, and multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs). The panel focuses on the closely linked issues of implementation and environmental justice, understood as global challenges. Strengthening the mechanisms to resolve global environmental conflicts, facilitate implementation, but also addressing broader questions of effectiveness and justice of environmental obligations on issues such as climate change, biodiversity, hazardous waste, water resource management, and protection of the marine environment is essential for addressing environmental challenges in an increasingly complex and polarized world. However, repeated regulatory and legal attacks, but also acts of undermining legitimacy regarding multilateral forms of cooperation by autocratic and populist governments or other actors in polarized societies are hampering the effectiveness of these mechanisms and thereby preventing environmentally just and open regulation in the European Union and internationally. Little is known about the connection between the legal mechanisms and political issues of implementation and conflict resolution , and how this affects environmental justice, understood here as the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of people in the implementation of environmental regulation. The panel seeks to bring together these themes inviting political scientists, legal scholars, and researchers from adjacent fields to address the topic from conceptual, empirical, and normative perspectives. At the same time, it is open to a diverse variety of theoretical and critical perspectives, methodologies, and empirical approaches in an attempt to capture highly dynamic developments by linking perspectives that transcend classical political science boundaries.
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The Legal Standing of Associations in European Climate Litigation Between Majoritarianism and Representativeness: Towards a Theory of Subsidiary Social Spheres | View Paper Details |
Identifying Hybrid Regulatory Instruments for Environmental Governance: A Roadmap for Nuanced Rule Typologies | View Paper Details |
Revised Legitimacy of Carbon Pricing: the Differentiated Diffusion of Emission Trading System (ETS) in EU and China | View Paper Details |
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) in the Mining Sector – A Case in the Changing Nature of Compliance, Due Diligence and Policy Expectations | View Paper Details |