1st Edition
Reforming Law and Economy for a Sustainable Earth Critical Thought for Turbulent Times
Introduction Part 1: International Environmental Law Reform 1. Proposals for international environmental law reform: a critical review of the literature 2. Refinement of the epistemology of global environmental sustainability Part 2: The Allocation Problem: Critique 3. The poverty of the market? Critique of economic prescriptions for international environmental law reform 4. The failure of market failure? Critique of the economic diagnosis of causes of global environmental change Part 3: The Allocation Problem: Re-diagnosis 5. Capitalism as allocation problem? Towards diagnosis of the causes of global environmental change Part 4: The Allocation Problem: Proposition 6. Towards international environmental law reform: towards a critical theory of justice? 7. Is ecological democracy sustainable?
Biography
Paul Anderson’s work combines philosophy, law and ecology to address environmental and other pressing public concerns. A research fellow in the School of Law at the University of Warwick, his current work examines prospects of democratising key domestic and international structures of governance.
"Paul Anderson’s book constitutes a comprehensive analysis of the dynamics of unsustainable development, revealing the underlying political economy and regulatory causes of intensifying global ecological unsustainability. It demonstrates considerable scholarship, a firm grasp of a wide variety of different knowledge of social scientific bases, debates, disciplinary perspectives and schools of thinking. It also, thankfully, provides some pertinent sources of hope in terms of the conditions and possibilities for effective global ecological governance in what is often a darkening field social scientific analysis of the contemporary human condition in relation to our ecocidal treatment of the planet."— John Barry, Queens University Belfast, UK
"Paul Anderson exposes the roulette wheel on which our sustainability bets are now placed. His analysis of this 'policy-masquerade of pricing' is sharp and cuts deep. His message is to the point; we need an institutional convergence on good governance rather than just more and more gambling to survive."— Aubrey Meyer, co-founder of Global Commons Institute
"The book reviews a wealth of thought across different disciplines, which in itself is no mean feat,... [and] provides a rich interdisciplinary analysis of the current unsustainable organisation of human life on this planet, as well as points[s] to ways to resolving this global crisis that will provide interesting reading for an interdisciplinary audience from international lawyers, to economists, philosophers and political scientists". — Lucy Ford, Environmental Politics
"The book is timely, thoroughly researched, well-argued, and important politically … Most importantly, Anderson’s Reforming Law and Economy for a Sustainable Earth is tremendous in its ability to foster interdisciplinary conversations and to leverage such conversations as to render the scope of the book necessary rather than ill-advised. Anderson not only promises that his book will address a huge issue (reforming law and economy!) he also delivers in a way that might be of use to a wide readership." - Chase Hobbs-Morgan, Tulsa Law Review
"This is a brilliant and seminal analysis of our current systemic dynamic of unsustainable development in relation to the overall issue of global ecological governance."— David Lorimer, Scientific and Medical Network Review






