Deterioration
of the Earth’s environment increasingly threatens
the natural resource base and processes upon which
all life on Earth depends. UNEP’s Global Environment
Outlook Year Book 2003 highlights the scope and variety
of the problems. Over one billion people currently
lack safe drinking water and sanitation, making waterborne
diseases one of the leading causes of death, especially
among children in poor countries. Two-thirds of the
world’s population now lives in areas of water shortages
where, increasingly, desertification threatens the
food supply. UN Habitat 2003 reported that more than
180 million people in Africa live in fragile areas
where they compete for water and land. In marine waters,
nearly three-quarters of all commercial fish stocks
are being harvested faster than they can reproduce
(FAO, 2002). More than 500,000 people in Asia die
every year from diseases related to air pollution
(WHO, 2003). Species are becoming extinct at an unprecedented
rate, taking with them potential yet unknown sources
of medicines, nutrition and other benefits. Munich
Re, the world’s largest reinsurance company, predicted
in 2003 that the global economic loss due to extreme
weather events would reach US$30 billion annually
by 2050. In sum, humans are rapidly exceeding the
carrying capacity of the environment.
Without strong and
multifaceted action by every person, the biosphere
may become unable to sustain human life. At the least,
coming generations will suffer deprivation and hardship
unless current patterns of production, consumption
and waste management are dramatically altered. Sustainable
development needs to become the watchword and policy
of all public agencies and officials and the responsibility
of every person.
This handbook is intended
to enable national judges in all types of tribunals
in both civil law and common law jurisdictions to
identify environmental issues coming before them and
to be aware of the range of options available to them
in interpreting and applying the law. It seeks to
provide judges with a practical guide to basic environmental
issues that are likely to arise in litigation. It
includes information on international and comparative
environmental law and references to relevant cases.
Judges in each particular country will supplement
this overview with more detailed information drawn
from national experiences, laws and traditions.
The publication of
the Judicial handbook on Environmental Law by UNEP
is a response to the request made by the chief justices
and other senior judges from some 100 countries who
participated in eleven regional judges Symposiums
on environmental law convened by UNEP during the period
1995-2002. The request was reiterated in the conclusions
and recommendations that were submitted to the World
Summit on Sustainable Development by the 2002 Global
Judges Symposium held in Johannesburg.
The publication was
developed through judicial consultative meetings that
were convened by UNEP in Rome (June 2003), London
(August 2003) and New York (June 2004).
At the request of
UNEP, the distinguished jurist and former Vice-President
of the International Court of Justice, Judge Christopher
G. Weeramantry, prepared an outline of the proposed
publication, which was placed before the Commonwealth
Magistrates and Judges Association Triennial Conference
held in Malawi in August 2003.
There it was discussed
and approved as a sound basis for the preparation
of the Judicial Handbook. The work on the preparation
of the Handbook proceeded thereafter on this basis.
At the London judicial
consultative meeting, two distinguished Professors
of Environmental Law, Dinah Shelton and Alexandre
Kiss, were requested to prepare the draft of the publication
for judicial review by a team of eminent judges from
developed and developing countries. The draft was
revised and finalized by the Judicial Editorial Board
at the New York consultative meeting held on 2-4 June,
2004, with the able research and editorial assistance
of Melinda Mannheim.
It must be appreciated
that the specific character of environmental problems
will necessarily differ from one country to another
and that environmental legislation and case law will
thus also differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.
Moreover, because of cultural variation and differences
in socio-economic conditions, judges will at times
bring different perspectives to the particular environmental
problem before them. While this is so, judges may
nonetheless find valuable instruction on how related
matters have been addressed and managed in other jurisdictions.
The handbook is organized
in two major sections. Part A, entitled “General Framework,”
reviews some of the fundamental principles and approaches
inherent in most environmental legal regimes and focuses
on the role of the courts in furthering the rule of
law in the environmental arena. Part B, entitled,
“Principal Areas of Environmental Law,” offers a more
detailed look at the features of the protection programmes
that have developed around specific environmental
and natural resource concerns (e.g., air, water, waste,
endangered species, etc.), and is intended to serve
as an initial reference for judges who encounter a
particular kind of environmental case.
In short, the handbook
attempts to identify a common core of law and policy
most relevant to the world’s judiciary, in the hope
that judges might be better equipped to discharge
their key role in breathing life into those environmental
requirements upon which the world’s collective heritage
depends.
Klaus Toepfer
Executive Director – UNEP
*Judicial
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