- Special Issue: New Frontiers in Ocean Environmental Governance
- Beatriz Martinez Romera & Katrina M. Wyman, New frontiers in ocean environmental governance: Private actors, public goods
- Alex G. Oude Elferink, Exploring the future of the institutional landscape of the oceans beyond national jurisdiction
- Ronán Long, Restoring marine environmental damage: Can the Costa Rica v Nicaragua compensation case influence the BBNJ negotiations?
- Felicity Deane, Anna Huggins, & Md Saiful Karim, Measuring, monitoring, reporting and verification of shipping emissions: Evaluating transparency and answerability
- Meinhard Doelle & Aldo Chircop, Decarbonizing international shipping: An appraisal of the IMO's Initial Strategy
- Jesper Jarl Fanø, Enforcement of the 2020 sulphur limit for marine fuels: Restrictions and possibilities for port States to impose fines under UNCLOS
- Nikolaos Giannopoulos, Global environmental regulation of offshore energy production: Searching for legal standards in ocean governance
- Makoto Seta, The contribution of the International Organization for Standardization to ocean governance
- Solène Guggisberg, The roles of nongovernmental actors in improving compliance with fisheries regulations
- Original Articles
- Matthew Volk, Spiegl Arie Trouwborst, & Ingrid Natasha Visser, Mission creep in the application of wildlife law: The progressive dilution of legal requirements regarding a wild‐born orca kept for ‘research’ purposes
- Florian Rabitz, Gene drives and the international biodiversity regime
- Case Notes
- Kathleen Garnett, Hold your pipettes: The European Court of Justice's findings in Confédération Paysanne & Others stirs GMOtions
Saturday, November 30, 2019
New Issue: Review of European, Comparative & International Environmental Law
The latest issue of the Review of European, Comparative & International Environmental Law (Vol. 28, no. 3, November 2019) is out. Contents include: