04726nam 22005771 450 991082371470332120200514202323.01-5099-2028-51-5099-2030-71-5099-2029-310.5040/9781509920303(CKB)4340000000275427(MiAaPQ)EBC5345452(OCoLC)1012654211(UtOrBLW)bpp09261785(MiAaPQ)EBC6163860(EXLCZ)99434000000027542720180409d2018 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe constitution of the environmental emergency /Jocelyn StaceyPortland, Oregon :Hart Publishing,2018.1 online resource (295 pages)1-5099-4027-8 1-5099-2027-7 Includes bibliographical references and index.Introduction -- I. Methodology, Terminology and Context -- II. Outline of the Book -- Part I: The Environmental Emergency -- 1. The Concept of the Environmental Emergency -- I. The Environmental Emergency -- II. Failing Schmitt's Challenge -- III. The Formal Conception of the Rule of Law -- IV. Conclusion -- 2. Environmental Reform: The Problem of Discretion in Environmental Law -- I. The Environmental Reform Position -- II. Black and Grey Holes in Canadian Environmental Law -- III. Impoverished Environmental Reform Solutions -- IV. Conclusion -- 3. Environmental Governance: The Problem of Law in Environmental Law -- I. Old and New Governance -- II. Three Examples of Environmental Governance -- III. Reclaiming the Rule of Law -- IV. Conclusion -- Part II: Responding to the Environmental Emergency 4. The Requirement of Public Justification -- I. Responding to Schmitt's Challenge -- II. Public Justification: A Democratic Conception of the Rule of Law -- III. Conclusion -- 5. Institutional Design: Reforming Forest Practices -- I. The Institutional Dimensions of Public Justification -- II. The Forest Practices Board and the Mountain Pine Beetle Response -- III. The Forest Practices Board and Its Governance Response -- IV. Conclusion -- 6. Pipelines and Principles: Reasonableness and Fairness in Environmental Law -- I. The Pipelines, the NEB and Their Problems -- II. In Defence of Environmental Principles -- III. Publicly Justifying the Pipelines 7 -- IV. Conclusion -- 7. Reasoning Adequately: Wind Turbine Risks and Benefits -- I. The Confluence of Environmental Factors in Wind Turbine Development -- II. The Method and Purpose of Reasonableness -- III. Reasoning Adequately about Wind Turbine Approvals -- IV. Conclusion -- 8. The Rule of Law and the Right to a Healthy Environment -- I. The Case for a Charter Right to a Healthy Environment -- II. Environmental Protection and Section 7 Adjudication -- III. Common Law Constitutional Rights Adjudication -- IV. ConclusionThis book argues for a reframing of environmental law. It starts from the premise that all environmental issues confront lawmakers as emergencies. Environmental issues pose a fundamental challenge to law because it is impossible to reliably predict which issues contain the possibility of an emergency and what to do in response to such an unforeseen event. These features undermine the conventional understanding of the rule of law. This book argues that approaching environmental issues from the emergency perspective leads us to an understanding of the rule of law that requires public justification. This requirement recentres the debates in environmental law around the question of why governance under the rule of law is something worth having in the environmental context. It elaborates what the rule of law requires of decision-makers in light of our ever-present vulnerability to catastrophic environmental harm. Controversial, compelling and above all timely, this book presents an important new perspective on environmental lawDisastersRisk assessmentEnvironmental disastersEnvironmental lawEnvironmental protectionLawPhilosophyInternational environmental lawDisastersRisk assessment.Environmental disasters.Environmental law.Environmental protection.LawPhilosophy.344.04/6Stacey Jocelyn1649723UtOrBLWUtOrBLWUkLoBPBOOK9910823714703321The constitution of the environmental emergency3998626UNINA