
Environmental Principles
From Political Slogans to Legal Rules
Nicolas de Sadeleer(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 27. January 2005
Book
Paperback/Softback
488 pages
978-0-19-928092-6 (ISBN)
Description
This book traces the evolution of environmental principles from their origins as vague political slogans reflecting fears about environmental hazards to their embodiment in enforceable laws. Since the early 1970s environmental issues have taken on an ever increasing profile. This has been due in part to a fundamental change in the type and scale of risk posed by industry. Issues such as global warming, GM food, and mad cow disease typify the new kinds of risk:
potentially catastrophic consequences could ensue yet there is no scientific agreement over their precise causation, duration, and other concerns.
Environmental law has always responded to risks posed by industrial society but the new generation of risks have required a new set of environmental principles, emerging from a combination of public fears, science, ethics, and established legal practice. This book shows how three of the most important principles of modern environmental law grew out of this new age of ecological risk: the 'polluter pays' principle, the preventive principle and the precautionary principle. The author examines the
legal force of these principles and in the process offers a novel theory of norm formation in environmental law by unearthing new grounds of legality.
The book will be of value to all those with an interest in environmental law and policy, in the relationship between law and science, and in the ways in which political and ethical values can become embodied in laws.
potentially catastrophic consequences could ensue yet there is no scientific agreement over their precise causation, duration, and other concerns.
Environmental law has always responded to risks posed by industrial society but the new generation of risks have required a new set of environmental principles, emerging from a combination of public fears, science, ethics, and established legal practice. This book shows how three of the most important principles of modern environmental law grew out of this new age of ecological risk: the 'polluter pays' principle, the preventive principle and the precautionary principle. The author examines the
legal force of these principles and in the process offers a novel theory of norm formation in environmental law by unearthing new grounds of legality.
The book will be of value to all those with an interest in environmental law and policy, in the relationship between law and science, and in the ways in which political and ethical values can become embodied in laws.
Reviews / Votes
The book represents a step forward in the theory on the nature and functions of the environmental principles communicating complex concepts. ... Therefore the book can strongly be recommended to environmental academics. * Nordic Journal of International Law *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Scholars and advanced students of environmental law, international, WTO and comparative law, and administrative law.
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 27 mm
Weight
739 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-928092-6 (9780199280926)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
11/2002
Oxford University Press
€71.80
Article exhausted; check different version
Person
Nicolas de Sadeleer teaches environmental law at the Facultes Universitaires Saint-Louis in Brussels, where he is Director of their Environmental Law Centre, CEDRE.
Author
Facultes Universitaires Saint-Louis, Brussels, Director of the Environmental Law Centre, CEDRE.
Content
PART I: THE POLLUTER PAYS, PREVENTION AND PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLES: THREE APPROACHES TO ENVIRONMENTAL RISK; PART II : THE LEGAL STATUS AND ROLE OF THE POLLUTER-PAYS, PREVENTIE AND PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLES : A SHIFT FROM MODERN TO POST-MODERN LAW