Friday, November 16, 2018

New Issue: Climate Law

The latest issue of Climate Law (Vol. 8, nos. 3-4, 2018) is out. Contents include:
  • Special Issue: Climate Law as a New Discipline
    • Ronald B. Mitchell, Climate Law: Accomplishments and Areas for Growth
    • Benoit Mayer, The Critical Functions of Scholarship in Climate Law
    • Michael Faure & Jing Liu, Urgently Needed: Climate Lawyers
    • David M. Driesen, The Economic Dynamics of Climate Disruption and the Need for a Better Legal Theory
    • Laura Mai, The Growing Recognition of Transnational Climate Governance Initiatives in the UN Climate Regime: Implications for Legal Scholarship
    • Anna Huggins, The Evolution of Differential Treatment in International Climate Law: Innovation, Experimentation, and ‘Hot’ Law
    • Natalie L. Dobson, Exploring the Crystallization of ‘Climate Change Jurisdiction’: A Role for Precaution?
    • Cinnamon P. Carlarne & Mohamed S. Helal, A Conversation about Climate Change Law and the ‘International Community’
    • Alexander Zahar, The Contested Core of Climate Law
    • Benoit Mayer, The Place of Customary Norms in Climate Law: A Reply to Zahar
    • Benjamin J. Richardson, Climate Change Law: Encounters with Aesthetics and Art
    • Christopher Campbell-Duruflé & Sumudu Anopama Atapattu, The Inter-American Court’s Environment and Human Rights Advisory Opinion: Implications for International Climate Law
    • Joshua Prentice, The Revision of the European Union’s Emissions Trading System Ahead of the Fourth Trading Period, 2021–2030