Full Description
This book takes an interdisciplinary approach to the question of what role international law plays in promoting a resolution of Central and East European transboundary environmental disputes. The author examines a wide variety of environmental disputes in Central and Eastern Europe, with particular emphasis on the Gabcíkovo-Nagymaros Project dispute between Slovakia and Hungary, and melds international legal theory and international relations theory to develop an analytic framework for understanding the role of law and assessing its future application.
Contents
Acknowledgements Table of Cases Table of Major Treaties and International Instruments List of Abbreviations Introduction PART I: CENTRAL AND EAST EUROPEAN TRANSBOUNDARY ENVIRONMENTAL DISPUTES FROM THE BALTIC SEA TO THE BLACK SEA The Northern Tier: Polluting the Baltic Sea, Dark Clouds Over the Baltic Triangle and Silesian Coals Basin, and East Meets West in Temelín The Southern Tier: Cleaning Up After the Soviets, Dumping in the Danube, Dueling Nuclear Power Plants, and Suffocating the Black Sea PART II: USING INTERNATIONAL LAW TO RESOLVE THE SLOVAK-HUNGARIAN DISPUTE CONCERNING THE CONSTRUCTION AND OPERATION OF THE GABCIKOVO-NAGYMAROS PROJECT The Dispute Formation Phase: Soviet Inspired Designs to Harness the Power of the Danube and Post-transformation Second Thoughts The Pre-resolution Phase: Enter Sub-state Actors, Third Parties and International Law The Resolution Phase: Making the Case to the International Court of Justice The Implementation Phase: Back to the Negotiating Table, and Maybe Back to the Court PART III: UNDERSTANDING THE ROLE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW The Regime of International Law: Its Nature and Function Influencing the Utilization of International Law: Non-state Actors, Situational Circumstances, and Factors of Functionality PART IV: PROSPECTS FOR AN INCREASING ROLE FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW IN PROMOTING CENTRAL AND EAST EUROPEAN TRANSBOUNDARY ENVIRONMENTAL DISPUTE RESOLUTION Gauging the Operability of International Law: the Evolving Circumstances Predicting the Future: an Increasing Role for International Law? Conclusions Index