
The latest issue of
Transnational Environmental Law (Vol. 11, no. 3, November 2022) is out. Contents include:
- Editorial
- Thijs Etty, Josephine van Zeben, Cinnamon Carlarne, Leslie-Anne Duvic-Paoli, Bruce Huber, & Anna Huggins, The Possibility of Radical Change in Transnational Environmental Law
- Symposium: Private Rigths for Nature
- Laura Burgers, Symposium Foreword: Private Rights of Nature
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Björn Hoops, What If the Black Forest Owned Itself? A Constitutional Property Law Perspective
on Rights of Nature
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Alex Putzer, Tineke Lambooy, Ignace Breemer & Aafje Rietveld, The Rights of Nature as a Bridge between Land-Ownership Regimes:
The Potential of Institutionalized Interplay in Post-Colonial Societies
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Visa A.J. Kurki, Can Nature Hold Rights? It’s Not as Easy as You Think
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Articles
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Peter Lawrence, Justifying Representation of Future Generations and Nature: Contradictory or
Mutually Supporting Values?
- Eva Bernet Kempers, Transition rather than Revolution: The Gradual Road towards Animal Legal
Personhood through the Legislature
- Christine Parker & Lucinda Sheedy-Reinhard, Are Banks Responsible for Animal Welfare and Climate Disruption? A Critical
Review of Australian Banks’ Due Diligence Policies for Agribusiness Lending
- Yoshiko Naiki & Jaruprapa Rakpong, EU–Third Country Dialogue on IUU Fishing: The Transformation of Thailand’s
Fisheries Laws
- Wei-Chung Lin, Bringing Multilateral Environmental Agreements into Development Finance:
An Analysis of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank’s Environmental and
Social Framework