| Some notes on Guyana’s Low Carbon Development Strategy and Global Environmental law | | Print | |
| Written by Abiola Inniss LLB,LLM,ACIArb |
| Sunday, 14 August 2011 14:25 |
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Global environmental law has emerged as an amalgam of various concepts from different legal systems across the globe, from which it has shamelessly borrowed a number of principles. It may be described a set of legal principles developed by national , international and transnational environmental systems to protect the environment and to manage natural resources This has resulted in the universal application of several ideas about the regulation of the environment which are as widely recognized. Global environmental law has its own body of substantive and procedural rules and mechanisms which are unique to the governance of environmental law across the world. In example, it comprises, public international environmental law, which nomenclature commonly refers to the treaties and customary international law principles governing the relations between nations .It includes national environmental law which of course describes the principles used by local legislation to govern the activities and behavior of persons within a nation’s borders. It extends to transnational law which describes the set of legal rules used to regulate the relations of private persons and organizations across nations. It should be immediately obvious that a national economic strategy which promotes the controlled and innovative use of forest and forest products with the goal of lessening environmental impact and developing a new brand of commerce would immediately fall into the inextricable embrace of global environmental law. There seems however, to be little attention to this critical aspect of the legal regulation of the LCDS and there is yet significant ignorance about the value of this area of law to the Global environmental law has emerged as the result of a necessary interrelation of the practical experiences of regulation, the pragmatic needs of persons and the necessity of regulating national and international conduct. It is not the offspring of social scientists and intellectuals who have nothing better to do than create abstract legal concepts which they are afterward at pains to explain to both themselves and others. The discipline of law is as practical as it is academic, a combination which is exemplified in global environmental law. It is hardly fathomable that the Guyana LCDS which is a significant undertaking does not have the necessary legal research and resulting structure which will support it with a sound internationally viable legal structure. While Guyana seems to have something of an environmental policy, there is as yet no environmental legislation .This is perhaps significant from the point of view of the existing possibility of creating a substantial set of laws which will encompass some of the requirements of global environmental law ; it might also be seen as the result of an apathetic approach legal intellectual work , which does not acknowledge the value of sound , in-depth research, analysis and application, and which could not be bothered to invest in such work. It is the role of the It is to be hoped that legal regulators , academics and of course the Guyana government will consult seriously on this subject with the intention of acquiring the necessary knowledge and expertise to devise the supporting legal system for the LCDS. This is not a task for the faint hearted, but it is far easier than coping with the local and international legal issues which will develop in short order, and for which there will be no scheme for redress. It can hardly be restated enough that the Guyana LCDS needs a robust, working, workable legal and regulatory framework if it is to succeed in the long term. The Abiola.A.A Inniss LLB, LLM (Business Law),ACIArb mediator, and arbitrator, is a graduate of The DeMontfort University School of law, UK and member of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators UK She is a legal consultant in business law, law teacher, internationally published legal writer and speaker on Caribbean Intellectual Property, general Business law and ADR. She is the author of Copying, Copyright and the Internet; the issue of internet regulation with regard to copying and copyright. Lambert Academic Publishing March 2011, and Essays in Caribbean Law and Policy; a comprehensive discourse. Lambert Academic Publishing, May 2011, both available at Barnes & Noble bookstores and amazon.com worldwide. |
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