Προσθήκη στα αγαπημένα
Transnational standards related to the environmental and social sustainability of production processes are becoming commonplace governance tools in the global economy. This book demonstrates how sustainability standards serve two fundamentally different functions: coordination and regulation. Standards can coordinate like-minded businesses in an industry by demarcating common sustainability commitments to distinguish between sustainable and unsustainable sectors of the industry. Yet, standards can also regulate businesses, requiring them to change production and trade practices to align with the sustainability demands of third-parties, including trading partners, advocacy groups, consumers and other civil society constituencies. These two functions reflect the private and public lenses, respectively, through which legal scholars can assess standards as transnational sustainability laws. With key case studies in forestry standards, palm oil standards, and the ISEAL Alliance, this book demonstrates how socio-legal analyses of transnational rulemaking inform debates about global administrative law and the constitutionalization of the global economy.
. Connects transnational legal theory with socio-legal case studies, focusing on actual practices in sustainability governance
. Applies a model of two competing functions across three different case studies so readers can understand how the model fits into different contexts and industries
. Engages extensively with sociological and political science scholarship, providing a multi-faceted depiction of sustainability standards
Introduction
1. Between co-ordination and regulation: the dual functions of voluntary sustainability standards
2. The socio-legal analysis of sustainability standards
3. Governing public forests with private standards: the case of FSC in the Great Lakes region
4. Certifying global palm oil productions: the case of the roundtable on sustainable palm oil
5. Meta-regulating sustainability standards: the case of ISEAL alliance
6. The politics of transnational sustainability laws
Conclusion.
Περιγραφή
Transnational standards related to the environmental and social sustainability of production processes are becoming commonplace governance tools in the global economy. This book demonstrates how sustainability standards serve two fundamentally different functions: coordination and regulation. Standards can coordinate like-minded businesses in an industry by demarcating common sustainability commitments to distinguish between sustainable and unsustainable sectors of the industry. Yet, standards can also regulate businesses, requiring them to change production and trade practices to align with the sustainability demands of third-parties, including trading partners, advocacy groups, consumers and other civil society constituencies. These two functions reflect the private and public lenses, respectively, through which legal scholars can assess standards as transnational sustainability laws. With key case studies in forestry standards, palm oil standards, and the ISEAL Alliance, this book demonstrates how socio-legal analyses of transnational rulemaking inform debates about global administrative law and the constitutionalization of the global economy.
. Connects transnational legal theory with socio-legal case studies, focusing on actual practices in sustainability governance
. Applies a model of two competing functions across three different case studies so readers can understand how the model fits into different contexts and industries
. Engages extensively with sociological and political science scholarship, providing a multi-faceted depiction of sustainability standards