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In: Oxford Handbook of Constitutional Law in Asia (Oxford University Press, Forthcoming)
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Working paper
According to the Albanian Constitution the environmental law is not specifically granted as a fundamental right, consequently and the right of claim in case of environmental damage and the issues that are related with the environment are not in a constitutional level. The samples that are offered are Italy, France, Portugal, Spain etc. The raise in a constitutional level would guarantee the fundamental right to protect health and life quality, also the environment, but also as well approximate the domestic legislation with that community of Aquis Communautaire, as a future part of the Europian Union.
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Blog: Verfassungsblog
In Community of La Oroya v. Peru the IACtHR for the first time found a violation of the autonomous right to a healthy environment in a non-indigenous context related to the long-lasting environmental contamination of a community by toxic substances. La Oroya lays foundational principles that will likely shape the content and direction of environmental and climate change litigation and jurisprudence in the Americas. This historic judgment provides a robust basis for anticipating how the Court will handle the specification of environmental rights within the climate emergency and how it may accordingly inform States' human rights obligations.
In: UNIVERSAL HUMAN RIGHTS AND EXTRATERRITORIAL OBLIGATIONS, Mark Gibney & Sigrun Skogly, eds., University of Pennsylvania Press, 2010
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This book shows why a fundamental right to an adequate environment ought to be provided in the constitution of any modern democratic state. It explains why the right to an environment adequate for one's health and well-being is a genuine human right and why it ought to be constitutionalised
In: Environmental politics, Volume 15, Issue 1, p. 127-128
ISSN: 0964-4016
This book shows why a fundamental right to an adequate environment ought to be provided in the constitution of any modern democratic state. It explains why the right to an environment adequate for one's health and well-being is a genuine human right and why it ought to be constitutionalised.
In: Encyclopedia of Public Administration and Public Policy, May 2014
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In: Critical review of international social and political philosophy: CRISPP, Volume 24, Issue 5, p. 710-724
ISSN: 1743-8772
In: Austrian Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, p. 107-108
In: S Bogojevic and R Rayfuse (eds), Environmental Rights in Europe and Beyond (Hart Publishing 2017, Forthcoming)
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In: PRINCIPLES OF CONSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW, p. 329, James May, ed., American Bar Association, 2011
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The development of an international substantive environmental right on a global level has long been a contested issue. To a limited extent environmental rights have developed in a fragmented way through different legal regimes. This book examines the potential for the development of a global environmental right that would create legal duties for all types of decision-makers and provide the bedrock for a new system of international environmental governance. Taking a problem solving approach, the book seeks to demonstrate how straightforward and logical changes to the existing global legal architecture would address some of the fundamental root causes of environmental degradation. It puts forward a draft global environmental right that would integrate duties for both state and non-state actors within reformed systems of environmental governance and a rational framework for business and industry to adhere to in order that those systems could be made operational. It also examines the failures of the existing international climate change regime and explains how the draft global environmental right could remedy existing deficits. This innovative and interdisciplinary book will be of great interest to policy-makers, students and researchers in international environmental law, climate change, environmental politics and global environmental governance as well as those studying the WTO, international trade law, human rights law, constitutional law and corporate law.
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