This important volume steps beyond conventional legal approaches to sustainability to provide fresh insights into perhaps one of the most critical global challenges of our time.
Offering analysis of sustainability at land and sea alongside trade, labour and corporate governance perspectives, this book articulates important debates about the role of law. From impacts on local societies to domestic sustainable development policies and major international goals, it considers multiple jurisdictional levels.
With original, interdisciplinary research from experts in their legal fields, this is a rounded assessment of the complex interplay of law and sustainability—both as it is now and as it should be in the future.
Table des matières
Introduction
PART 1: SUSTAINABILITY THROUGH HISTORY
Sustainability and Law: An historical and theoretical overview ~ Margherita Pieraccini and Tonia Novitz
Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals: ‘responsive, inclusive, participatory and representative decision-making’? ~ Tonia Novitz and Margherita Pieraccini
PART 2: CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Accounting for Climate Change: Rethinking the chaotic corporate reporting landscape and its purpose with the UK’s failure as a case study ~ Charlotte Villiers and Georgina Tsagas
Sustainable Corporate Governance: trimming or sowing? ~ Nina Boeger
PART 3: TRADE
The International Trade Regime and SDG 2: Reforming Agricultural Markets for Food Security ~ Clair Gammage
Social Sustainability, Labour and Trade: Forging Connections ~ Tonia Novitz
PART 4: PLACES
Land Ownership, Use and Sustainability in a Pluriverse ~ Chris Willmore
Sustainability and marine conservation law ~ Margherita Pieraccini
A propos de l’auteur
Tonia Novitz is Professor of Labour Law at the University of Bristol. Her research interests focus predominantly on labour law, international and EU trade and the protection of human rights.