ASIA PACIFIC JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
Free
access to apjel Volume 19
25 May 2017
Dear reader,
The IUCN
Academy of Environmental Law's annual Colloquium in Cebu, the Philippines will
soon start and to mark the occasion, we are delighted to offer free access
until 14th June to the current issue of APJEL (Volume 19).
Please feel
welcome to share the good news, and also recommend the journal to your library.
With best wishes,
Ben Booth
Senior Commissioning Editor, Environmental Law
Senior Commissioning Editor, Environmental Law
FREE ARTICLES
Editorial
Editorial: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development,
Tim Stephens and Ed Couzens
Articles
Enhancing Chinese law and practice to combat illegal, unreported
and unregulated fishing and trade, Juan He
The role of public and private insurance in reducing losses from
extreme weather events and disasters, Howard Kunreuther and Rosemary Lyster
Exploring new research directions for achieving a sustainable
future: what can be learned from the biofuel weed risk case study?, Elodie Le Gal
Biological diversity conservation laws in South East Asia and
Singapore: a regional approach in pursuit of the United Nations’ Sustainable
Development Goals?,
Burton Ong, Lye Lin-Heng and Joseph Chun
Country
Report
‘Walking a tightrope’: India's challenges in meeting the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda
with specific reference to climate change, Bill Pritchard
Book Reviews
S Jayakumar, Tommy Koh, Robert Beckman and Hao Duy Phan, Transboundary Pollution: Evolving Issues
of International Law and Policy (Edward Elgar, Cheltenham 2015) 456
pp, Reviewed by
Adam Byrne
Joshua Bishop and Chloe Hill (eds), Global Biodiversity Finance: The Case for International
Payments for Ecosystem Services (Edward Elgar, Cheltenham 2014) 208
pp, Reviewed by
Evan Hamman
Simon Marsden and Elizabeth Brandon, Transboundary Environmental Governance in Asia: Practice
and Prospects with the UNECE Agreements (Edward Elgar, Cheltenham
2015) 360 pp, Reviewed
by Michelle Lim
Rosemary Lyster, Climate
Justice and Disaster Law (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2016)
436 pp, Reviewed by
Jeffrey McGee