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E-raamat: Sustainable Development Principles in the Decisions of International Courts and Tribunals: 1992-2012

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The 2002 New Delhi Declaration of Principles of International Law relating to Sustainable Development marked a significant milestone setting out seven principles of sustainable development that have been agreed in treaties and soft-law instruments such as the outcomes of the 1992 UN ‘Earth Summit’ Conference on Environment and Development. Since then, the recognition of the New Delhi principles has been increasingly widespread, occurring across several fields of law by dispute settlement bodies with diverse jurisdictions over human rights, international trade, investment, and international crimes, amongst others.

This book provides an overview of the expanding body of jurisprudence incorporating the New Delhi principles of sustainable development. Consisting of chapters written by respected commentators it documents the application and interpretation of these principles by international and regional courts, tribunals and dispute settlement bodies. The book examines the differences and commonalities in application amongst courts with jurisdiction over the environment, human rights, trade, investment and international crime. It charts the evolution of principles on sustainable development in international law from soft law standards towards recognition as customary law in certain instances. Before going on to assess the remaining practical, legal, political and economic challenges to further judicial consideration and acceptance of the principles. It provides a unique contribution of great interest to policy-makers, civil-society organizations, academics and students, and practising lawyers concerned with sustainable development around the world.

Table of cases
x
Table of treaties and declarations
xxii
Abbreviations and acronyms xxvii
Notes on contributors xxxii
Foreword xli
H.E. Judge
C.G. Weeramantry
Preface xliii
H.E. Judge James Crawford
Preface xlv
Justice Antonio Herman Benjamin
Acknowledgements xlvii
Tribute xlviii
H.E. Judge
C.G. Weeramantry
1 Introduction
1(26)
Marie-Claire Cordonier Segger
H.E. Judge
C.G. Weeramantry
PART I Evolution of international law and policy on sustainable development
27(98)
2 Commitments to sustainable development through international law and policy
29(70)
Marie-Claire Cordonier Segger
3 Advancements in the principles of international law on sustainable development
99(10)
Nico Schrijver
4 Achieving sustainable justice through international law
109(16)
H.E. Judge
C.G. Weeramantry
PART II Architecture of international dispute settlement related to sustainable development
125(48)
5 A Complex System of International Courts and Tribunals
127(20)
Cairo Robb
Alexandra Harrington
6 Sustainable development challenges in international dispute settlement
147(26)
Cairo Robb
Marie-Claire Cordonier Segger
Caroline Jo
PART III Sustainable development principles in State-to-State dispute settlement mechanisms
173(270)
International Court of Justice
175(2)
7 The Sofia Guiding Statements on sustainable development principles in the decisions of international tribunals
177(65)
Duncan Erench
8 The principles of sustainable development in the case concerning Pulp Mills on the River Uruguay
242(13)
Dire Tladi
9 Sustainable development law principles in the Costa Rica v Nicaragua territorial disputes
255(11)
Jorge Cabrera Medaglia
Miguel Saldivia Olave
10 Sustainable development in the judgments of the International Court of Justice
266(17)
Marcel Szabo
Permanent Court of Arbitration
281(2)
11 Developing the judicial habit in nuanced ways through the Abyei-Sudan case
283(14)
Jennieer Mckay
12 The Iron Rhine case: on the right track to sustainable development?
297(22)
Freya Baetens
International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea
317(2)
13 The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (LOSC) and sustainable development jurisprudence
319(20)
David Freestone
Freedom Kai Phillips
14 The interpretation of sustainable development principles in ITLOS
339(18)
Aline Jaeckel
Tim Stephens
World Trade Organization dispute settlement mechanism
355(2)
15 Disputes on sustainable development in the WTO regime
357(27)
Markus Gehring
Alexandre Genest
16 The principle of good governance in WTO disputes
384(14)
Jarrod Hepburn
17 The principle of integration in WTO/TRIPS jurisprudence
398(27)
Henning Grosse Ruse-Khan
18 Elaborating the common but differentiated responsibilities principle in the WTO
425(18)
Joyeeta Gupta
Nadia Sanchez
PART IV Sustainable development in State-to-other dispute settlement mechanisms
443(366)
Human rights courts
445(2)
19 The principles of sustainable development in the practice of UN human rights bodies
447(23)
Stephanie Saedi
Sebastien Jodoin
20 Sustainable development controversies in the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights
470(21)
Hennie Strydom
21 Sustainable development priorities in the Inter-American Human Rights system
491(24)
Alexandra Keenan
22 Sustainable development principles in the European Court of Human Rights
515(24)
Armellk Gouritin
Investor-State arbitral tribunals
537(2)
23 The integration principle in ICSID awards
539(15)
Antony Crockett
24 The principle of public participation in ICSID arbitrations
554(29)
Avi Dan Kent
25 The principle of good governance in the reasoning of investor-State arbitral tribunals
583(14)
Jonathan Bonnitcha
Regional courts and dispute settlement mechanisms
595(2)
26 The principle of integration for sustainable development in European policy and jurisprudence
597(19)
Marie-Claire Cordonier Segger
Markus Gehring
27 The principles of integration and precaution in the European legal regimes
616(35)
Zsuzanna Horvath
28 The emergence of sustainable development jurisprudence in South Asia
651(29)
Sumudu Atapattu
29 Sustainable development principles in the Caribbean Court of Justice
680(22)
Danielle Turnqliest Moulton
Stephanie Forte
30 Application of principles of sustainable development in the Mekong dispute settlement
702(21)
Phan Tuan Hung
Alexander Kenny
Dispute resolution mechanisms in international organizations
721(2)
31 Sustainable development concerns at the Aarhus Convention Compliance Committee
723(15)
Andriy Andrusevych
Caroline Jo
32 Sustainable development priorities in World Bank Inspection Panel decisions
738(30)
Sabink Schlemmer-Schulte
33 Principles on sustainable development in the NAAEC Commission on Environmental Cooperation
768(25)
Dane Ratliee
34 Principles of inter-generational equity, public participation and good governance in the Inter-American Development Bank's oversight mechanism
793(16)
Alexandra Harrington
Valentina Duran
PART V Conclusion
809(21)
35 Judicial deliberations and progress on sustainable development
811(19)
Marie-Claire Cordonier Segger
Alexandra Harrington
Erancesse Joy Cordon
Afterword 830(2)
Kamal Hossain
Selected bibliography 832(18)
Index 850
Marie-Claire Cordonier Segger is Senior Director, Centre for International Sustainable Development Law; Full Professor of Law, University of Waterloo; Advisor and Fellow of C-EENRG and LCIL, University of Cambridge; and Rapporteur, ILA Committee on Sustainable Resources Management. She also served as IDLO Senior Legal Expert, as Senior Legal Advisor to the UNFCCC CoP22 Presidency and Ramsar Convention and as A/Director, Canadian Government. She has authored/edited 21 books and over 120 papers, and assisted the UN and over 70 countries in legal education and reform on sustainable development.



H.E. Judge C. G. Weeramantry was former Vice-President of the International Court of Justice and Founder of the Weeramantry International Centre for Peace Education and Research. Over five decades as lawyer, legal educator, domestic judge, international judge, author and lecturer, the Judge pioneered international law on sustainable development. He was laureate of the UNESCO Peace Education Prize 2006 in recognition of his commitment and concrete undertakings in support of peace.