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12 Rev. Eur. Comp. & Int'l Envtl. L. iii (2003)

handle is hein.journals/reel12 and id is 1 raw text is: 


RECIEL 12 (1) 2003. ISSN 0962 8797


Editorial


The World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD)
was touted to be a milestone in international negoti-
ations. As a tool to facilitate and develop the concepts
and instruments generated at the United Nations Con-
ference on Environment and Development  (UNCED),
held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, many hoped that the
processes and  procedures  relating to sustainable
development  would  be reinvigorated, and possibly
expanded, in Johannesburg.

The mandate  of the WSSD was to review the progress
of implementing  the outcomes  of the UNCED,   by
identifying past successes and developing new initi-
atives using the framework of Agenda 21. Many issues
were  hotly debated at the WSSD,   including those
relating to the precautionary principle, the principle
of common   but  differentiated responsibilities, and
trade. Many  participants stressed the need for firm
timetables and commitments to be set to enable effect-
ive implementation to occur. Although commitments
were established relating to, inter alia, poverty eradica-
tion, water and sanitation, and fisheries and oceans,
there was some  disappointment  among  many  non-
government  organizations (NGOs) that more targets
and stricter timetables were not established. However,
other participants appeared pleased with the results,
indicating that the Summit   succeeded  in placing
sustainable development towards the forefront of the
international agenda. Ideas, such as the creation of
'type II' partnerships between governments, business
and civil society as a means to foster implementation
of sustainable development initiatives, were pointed to
as some of the WSSD's  successes. However, the real
test of the success of the WSSD may only come once it
can be determined  if, in fact, the initiatives that it
spawned  result in the improved implementation  of
sustainable development.

This issue of RECIEL  reviews the outcomes  of the
WSSD.The   issue commences  with an article by Marc
Pallemaerts (who  also wrote an article in RECIEL
10 years ago analysing the results of the UNCED) on
progress  made  at  Johannesburg.  Dr  Pallemaerts
assesses the relevance of the outcomes of the WSSD
for the implementation  and development  of inter-
national norms  and principles relating to sustain-
able development.  He finds that it is unlikely that
the outcomes of the WSSD  will further the develop-
ment  of international law. In making his point, he
compares  the mandate, process and outcomes of the
UNCED   and WSSD,  reviews the willingness of States
at the WSSD  to strengthen international legal stand-
ards in asserting international law as an instrument


of governance   for sustainable development,  and
analyses the  discussions on multilateral environ-
mental agreements  (MEAs)  at the Summit. He  also
discusses the contribution of the WSSD in improving
the normative  framework  for economic  and social
development, and examines  the extent to which Rio
principles were reaffirmed in Johannesburg.

Reviewing the prospects for success or failure of the
outcomes of the WSSD, Franz Xaver Perrez focuses in
his article on the outcomes relating to precaution and
to the relationship between trade and the environ-
ment, which were two of the most hotly debated issues
at the Summit.  Dr Perrez outlines the goals of the
WSSD,   summarizes the structure and environment-
related content of the WSSD Plan of Implementation,
and then analyses the provisions relating to precau-
tion and  trade. He reviews the discussions at the
WSSD   on precaution, highlighting the debates on the
evolution of the concept since the UNCED. Dr Perrez
finds that the WSSD's reaffirmation of Rio Principle 15
may  further its crystallization into customary inter-
national law. In terms of trade and the environment,
Dr Perrez focuses on the negotiations at the WSSD
revolving around the proposed use of the phrase 'no
hierarchy, mutual   supportiveness and  deference'
regarding the relationship between the international
trade regime and MEAs.  He  finds that although the
phrase was  not fully adopted, the concepts that lie
behind it were. Dr Perrez concludes that success or
failure of the WSSD  rests on how its decisions are
implemented  by governments and stakeholders.

In her article, Lavanya Rajamani traces the dissension
that has existed between developing and developed
countries in  international environmental dialogue
since its birth. She finds that discord has touched the
'framework, nature and agenda of international envir-
onmental  law', and that this has been inevitable due
to the disparate ideological foci of developing and
developed countries. By reviewing the history of the
changing nature of dialogue from  the 1972 United
Nations Conference on the Human in Stockholm to the
WSSD,  Ms Rajamani highlights the issues, debates and
circumstances that have caused the split, and analyses
the impacts that this dissonance has had in changing
the focus of dialogue, from the establishment of an
environment-development   link at Stockholm, to the
introduction of sustainable development at Rio, and
finally to the emphasis on development at Johannesburg.

Melanie Steiner examines the WSSD   process from a
civil society perspective, reviewing the formal and


@ Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 2003, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford OX4 2DQ, UK and 350 Main Street, Maiden, MA 02148 USA.


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