International law and the resolution of Central and East European transboundary environmental disputes / Paul R. Williams.
2000
JX5796.E W674 2000 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
International law and the resolution of Central and East European transboundary environmental disputes / Paul R. Williams.
Published
New York : St. Martin's Press, 2000.
Call Number
JX5796.E W674 2000
ISBN
0312227809 (cloth)
Description
xxiii, 345 pages ; 23 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)42580044
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 280-324) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Cases
List of Major Treaties and International Instruments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1
Pt. I
Central and East European Transboundary Environmental Disputes from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea
9
1The Northern Tier: Polluting the Baltic Sea, Dark Clouds over the Back Triangle and Silesian Coal Basins, and East Meets West in Temelin
11
2The Southern Tier: Cleaning up after the Soviets, Dumping in the Danube, Dueling Nuclear Power Plants, and Suffocating the Black Sea
31
Pt. II
Using International Law to Resolve the Slovak-Hungarian Dispute concerning the Construction and Operation of the Gabcikovo-Nagymaros Project
49
3The Dispute-Formation Phase: Soviet-Inspired Designs to Harness the Power of the Danube and Post-transformation Second Thoughts
51
4The Pre-Resolution Phase: Enter Sub-state Actors, Third Parties and International Law
60
5The Resolution Phase: Making the Case to the International Court of Justice
67
6The Implementation Phase: Back to the Negotiating Table and Possibly Back to the Court
109
Pt. III
Understanding the Role of International Law
121
7The Regime of International Law: Its Nature and Function
123
8Influencing the Utilization of International Law: Sub-State Actors, Interested Third Parties, Situational Circumstances and Factors of Functionality
135
Pt. IV
Prospects for an Increasing Role for International Law in Promoting Central and East European Transboundary Environmental Dispute Resolution
165
9Gauging the Operability of International Law: the Evolving Circumstances
167
10Predicting the Future: an Increasing Role for International Law?
188
Conclusion
218
Notes
218
Bibliography
280
Index
325