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21 Rev. Eur. Comp. & Int'l Envtl. L. 1 (2012)

handle is hein.journals/reel21 and id is 1 raw text is: 


RECIEL 21 (1) 2012. ISSN 0962 8797


Editorial


Twenty  years ago, the United Nations Conference  on
Environment  and  Development  (UNCED),  also known
as the 'Rio Conference' or the 'Earth Summit', brought
together over 30,000 people from  over 170 countries,
including Heads  of State from over 100 countries, as
well as a wide variety of nongovernmental observers.
Although UNCED was not   an unequivocal success, and
already showed  signs of the tensions between devel-
oped  and developing countries that would persist for
the years to come, it was undeniably a milestone in the
development  of modern   international environmental
law and governance. Two  important  multilateral trea-
ties -  the United  Nations  Framework   Convention
(UNFCCC)   and the Convention on  Biological Diversity
(CBD)  - were adopted, and the foundation was laid for
the adoption of the third 'Rio Convention': the United
Nations   Convention   to   Combat Desertification
(UNCCD).   In addition, the Rio Declaration, Agenda 21
and the Forest Principles provided key soft law aspects
complementing  the hard law treaties. From a paradig-
matic view, the conference was important in that it sig-
nified a shift from international environmental law to a
law of sustainable development.

Twenty years later, the situation looks quite different. A
series of financial crises has cast environmental issues
into the  background  of national  and  international
political agendas, increasing the anxiety about  the
effects of environmental law and policy on economic
growth. Optimism  about tackling environmental prob-
lems through multilateral negotiations has given way to
scepticism, particularly following the  Copenhagen
climate change conference in 2009. Although the 2010
Nagoya  Protocol to the CBD may  have restored some
faith in multilateralism, it is clear that the amount of
new environmental  treaties produced is no longer at the
levels of the 198os and 1990s. Another major develop-
ment has been the geopolitical power shift, with emerg-
ing powers  like China, India and Brazil taking on an
increasingly important role internationally.

It is against this changing background that the United
Nations   Conference  on   Sustainable Development
(UNCSD),  or 'Rio+20', will take place this summer in
the same   city as the conference twenty  years ago.
Rio+20's agenda  is dominated by  two major themes:

1 See, e.g., M. Pallemaerts, 'International Environmental Law from
Stockholm to Rio: Back to the Future?', 1 Review of European Com-
munity and International Environmental Law (1992), 254, at 264;
P.H. Sand, 'International Environmental Law after Rio', 4:1 European
Journal of International Law (1993), 337, at 378.


the green economy  and the institutional framework for
sustainable development. Unlike its precursor, Rio+20
is not expected to mark a new era of international envi-
ronmental lawmaking.  Instead, its focus is on 'renewed'
commitment   as well as implementation  of the exist-
ing framework  of international environmental law and
governance.

This issue of RECIEL contains several contributions by
a range of well-known scholars and practitioners that
highlight some of the challenges for international envi-
ronmental  governance in Rio and beyond. The articles
provide an interesting crosscutting perspective of some
of the issues that are dealt with - or that are conspicu-
ously absent - in the discussions at Rio+20.

The first article of this issue, by Pamela Chasek, draws
attention to the preparatory stages of major environ-
mental summits. In particular, she discusses the role of
regional consultations in the run-up to the UNCSD.
Chasek shows  how consultations in each of the five UN
regions have approached the major themes  of Rio+20,
including, but not limited to, the green economy and
the institutional framework for sustainable develop-
ment. She also indicates how the 'zero draft' agenda for
Rio+20, released in January 2012, reflects regional con-
vergence and divergence. Although she concludes that
regional priorities are well-reflected in this draft, she
also points to a lack of attention to regional environ-
mental governance  as such.

In the second article, Joyeeta Gupta and Nadia Sanchez
take up the ambitious challenge to assess whether inter-
national environmental law and governance is ready for
the future. They first show how international environ-
mental law and governance so far has been fragmented
and reactive, and how it may not be prepared to deal
with long-term challenges. They argue that given the
likely persistence of this fragmentation, it is necessary
to institutionalize a rule of law, pointing to a process of
constitutionalization as a way of achieving this. They
conclude that the time is ripe to pursue this project at
Rio+20.

Klaus Bosselmann,  Brendan  Mackey  and Peter Brown
also argue that the  current system  of international

2 United Nations, 'The Future We Want' (Draft outcome document for
the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, 10
January 2012), found at <http://www.uncsd2012.org/rio20/content/
documents/370The%20Future%2OWe%2OWant%201 OJan%20clean.
pdf>.


@ 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford OX4 2DQ, UK and 350 Main Street, Maiden, MA 02148, USA.


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