
The latest issue of the
Review of European, Comparative & International Environmental Law (Vol. 22, no. 3, November 2013) is out. Contents include:
- Special Issue: CITES+40
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John E. Scanlon, CITES at Its Best: CoP16 as a ‘Watershed Moment’ for the World's Wildlife
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Michael Bowman, A Tale of Two CITES: Divergent Perspectives upon the Effectiveness of the Wildlife Trade Convention
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Annecoos Wiersema, Uncertainty and Markets for Endangered Species under CITES
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Peter H. Sand, Enforcing CITES: The Rise and Fall of Trade Sanctions
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Richard Caddell, Inter-Treaty Cooperation, Biodiversity Conservation and the Trade in Endangered Species
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Soledad Aguilar, Regulatory Tools for the Management of Fish and Timber Species through CITES
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Sara F. Oldfield, The Evolving Role of CITES in Regulating the International Timber Trade
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Rosie Cooney & Max Abensperg-Traun, Raising Local Community Voices: CITES, Livelihoods and Sustainable Use
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Ed Couzens, CITES at Forty: Never Too Late to Make Lifestyle Changes
- Regular Articles
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Sikina Jinnah & Elisa Morgera, Environmental Provisions in American and EU Free Trade Agreements: A Preliminary Comparison and Research Agenda
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Seita Romppanen, The Role and Relevance of Private Actors in EU Biofuel Governance
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Deliana Ernst, Beam It Down, Scotty: The Regulatory Framework for Space-Based Solar Power
- Case Note
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Britta Sjöstedt, Costa Rica and Nicaragua before the International Court of Justice: Trying to Work Out the Complicated Relationship between Law and the Environment