Climate change and forest governance : lessons from Indonesia / Simon Butt, Rosemary Lyster & Tim Stephens.
2015
KNW3336 .B88 2015 (Map It)
Available at Cellar
Formats
Format | |
---|---|
BibTeX | |
MARCXML | |
TextMARC | |
MARC | |
DublinCore | |
EndNote | |
NLM | |
RefWorks | |
RIS |
Items
Details
Author
Title
Climate change and forest governance : lessons from Indonesia / Simon Butt, Rosemary Lyster & Tim Stephens.
Published
London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2015.
Call Number
KNW3336 .B88 2015
Former Call Number
Indo 959 B98 2015
ISBN
9781138833623 (hbk.)
1138833622 (hbk.)
9781315735351 (ebk)
1315735350 (ebk)
1138833622 (hbk.)
9781315735351 (ebk)
1315735350 (ebk)
Description
xxxviii, 184 pages ; 25 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)888401415
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Table of legislation
viii
Table of cases
xxiii
List of abbreviations
xxvi
Glossary
xxix
Preface
xxxiii
1.
Introduction
1
Key concerns about the implementation of REDD+
2
Public or private funding for REDD+?
6
Conclusion
15
2.
international legal framework for REDD+
17
Bali Action Plan
17
Outcomes of the UNFCCC negotiations since 2009: a focus on REDD+
19
Global average temperatures
20
Extending the life of the Kyoto Protocol
20
Developing country commitments
21
Developing a new legally binding protocol, instrument or outcome
22
financial mechanism
23
Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD+)
23
Ensuring legitimacy
35
Rights of Indigenous People
37
Conclusion
42
3.
Indonesia and international climate law and policy
45
Indonesia's greenhouse gas emissions profile
46
Indonesia and the UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol
46
4.
institutional environment for REDD+ in Indonesia
56
From integral ism to fragmentation
56
Decentralisation and jurisdictional conflicts
59
Supreme Court
60
Constitutional Court
62
Corruption
63
Customary law, participation, consent
67
Prior informed consent and public participation
70
Transparency and accountability
73
Conclusion
74
5.
Implementing international law in Indonesian law
78
Indonesia and international law
78
Indonesian legal scholarship
80
Indonesian judicial treatment of international law
82
Conclusion
86
6.
National regulatory framework for REDD+ in Indonesia
89
Forestry Law (1999)
89
REDD-related laws issued by the President of Indonesia
92
REDD+-related laws issued by the Forestry Ministry
94
7.
Jurisdictional conflicts and REDD+
101
National-regional jurisdictional conflict
102
National-level conflict
108
Rules of the game for resolving jurisdictional disputes -- the hierarchy of laws
109
Bureaucratic review
111
Judicial review by the Supreme Court
113
Conclusion: implications for REDD+
117
8.
Judicial and administrative relief and remedies
120
Overview of the Indonesian judicial system and standing
120
Remedies
128
Obstacles to judicial relief
130
Ombudsman
135
Freedom of information
136
2008 FOI Law
136
Implementation problems
142
Information Commission decisions
142
Potential problems
143
Conclusion
145
9.
Indonesian Constitutional Court and REDD+
150
Constitutional Court: jurisdiction, precedent and decision making
151
Maintaining State control
153
Upholding traditional rights
160
Empowering local governments
167
Conclusion
171
10.
Conclusion
173
Index
178