Climate Change Law and Policy – Legal Working Paper Series (2007)

The CISDL launched a Legal Working Paper Series on Climate Change Law and Policy at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Bali, Indonesia in 2007.

  • Climate Change Litigation in the United States of America, by Courtney Blodgett.
  • Links between European Emissions Trading and CDM Credits for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Projects, by David M. Driesen. Driesen – Links between European Emissions Trading and CDM Credits for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Projects
  • Climate Change and Subsidiarity: Advantages and Challenges for the Implementation of Climate Change Agreements in Federal Systems, by Markus Gehring.
  • Does TRIPS Facilitate or Impede Climate Change Technology Transfer into Developing Countries?, by Cameron Hutchison. Hutchison – Does TRIPS Facilitate or Impede Climate Change Technology Transfer into Developing Countries
  • Canadian Inuit Speak to Climate Change: Inuit Perceptions on the Adaptability of Land Claims Agreements to Accommodate Environmental Change, by Konstantia Koutouki & Natasha Lyons. Koutouki_Lyons – Canadian Inuit Speak to Climate Change
  • Climate Change and the Security Council: A Preliminary Framework for Implementing Remedial Measures Through Chapter VII of the UN Charter, by Christopher K. Penny. Penny – Climate Change and the Security Council
  • Compensated Reduction: Rewarding the Role of Forests in Climate Protection, by Annie Petsonk. Petsonk – Compensated Reduction
  • Clean Development Mechanisms’ Implications for the Korean Electricity Sector and a Proposal of “Less Strict Approach”, by Sangmin Shim.
  • Emission Trading and the Kyoto Protocol: Not a Panacea but a Good Start, by Moin A. Yahya.
  • Khoday, K. “Law, Development and Social Equity in Asia: A Comparative Analysis of Land Law as a Tool for Legal Empowerment of the Poor in India and China”, Tsinghua University Working Paper, Beijing (2007).
  • Khoday, K. “The Nomos of the Earth: Applying Complexity Theory to the Challenge of Integrated Legal Responses to Global Environmental Change” Tsinghua University Working Paper, Beijing (2007).