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COMPARING ENVIRONMENTAL LAW SYSTEMS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2023

Jorge E. Viñuales*
Affiliation:
Harold Samuel Professor of Law and Environmental Policy, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom; Professor of International Law, LUISS, Rome, Italy
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Abstract

This article revisits the overlooked field of comparative environmental law. It examines contributions to this field from the late 1960s to 2022, highlighting the methodologies proposed, their shortcomings, the main aspects and angles taken by the literature, and the curious lack of engagement by experts in comparative law proper with environmental law systems. On the basis of a structured examination of the literature, the article extracts four main aims or purposes that may guide this line of research: (i) clarifying the initial system by contrasting it with a foreign system; (ii) using the basic conceptual features of a known system to analyse and understand a foreign unknown system; (iii) evaluating and fine-tuning a system or an aspect thereof; and (iv) extracting analytical categories that can serve to map the entire field or areas of it.

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Shorter Articles
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of British Institute of International and Comparative Law

I. OVERVIEW

The first attempts at developing a comparative analysis of environmental laws and policies are almost as old (or recent) as environmental laws and policies themselves. One can situate, without too much risk of inaccuracy, the origins of this endeavour half a century ago, around the late 1960s and the early 1970s. Notably, such comparison was not attempted by scholars specialised in comparative law as a discipline, but by those who were interested in the substance of environmental law and policy, increasingly called ‘environmental lawyers’.

Half a century has elapsed, and this situation has barely changed. Major accounts of comparative law still pay limited attention, if any, to environmental law and policy.Footnote 1 From this perspective, this article is in part an invitation for comparative lawyers to bring their long and mature reflection on the methodology of comparing legal systems to bear on this complex and, to some extent, undefined area of law. It would be speculative, and probably uninteresting, to offer reasons why comparative lawyers have largely overlooked the subject, but this gap has consequences. A first consequence is that the methodologies developed for the comparative study of environmental laws and policies have been largely ‘un-disciplined’—in the positive meaning of the word—and therefore given rise to conceptual categories such as that of ‘transnational’Footnote 2 or ‘global law’.Footnote 3 In the large majority of cases, there is no attempt to root such methodologies in the standard schools of comparative law methods.Footnote 4 A second consequence is that, to the extent that comparative environmental law has been examined in the literature, it has been so mainly within the circle of environmental lawyers. This is perhaps because part of the barrier to entry is precisely the perception of those external to the field that environmental law is a moving target or a field without a clear perimeter. This is a genuine problem, which transpires even in how environmental lawyers themselves approach the object of comparative analysis.

Among the work of environmental lawyers which does attempt to provide some comparative analysis, one finds indeed at least three broad categories. First, a large number of environmental law studies, whether on domestic, transnational or international legal matters, contain some occasional or in passing references to other legal systems or approaches.Footnote 5 Second, there is a strand of work which focuses specifically on the social and political dimensions of risk regulation, with a general vocation.Footnote 6 In most cases, although the scope of the work is of general relevance, in truth the analysis is based on an extrapolation of a single legal system, typically from the Anglo-American tradition. For all the value of these contributions, with some notable exceptions discussed later, genuine comparative legal analysis remains implicit or ancillary. Third, a rarer body of contributions has made the comparison of environmental laws and policies its specific object.Footnote 7 The number of studies focusing on comparative environmental law as such is rare enough to attempt an overall examination of this field, which is the aim of this article.

This article does not cover all relevant works, as the boundaries between the first, second and third categories are not always clear and several considerations other than relevance, such as language (the bulk of the works reviewed are in English), are significant limiting factors. Yet, it endeavours to bring together a substantial part of the work in this field since the 1970s, in the hope that it may steer further interest, at a time when the importance of environmental law cannot be overstated. The works covered in this article represent, in the author's view, the core body of work on comparative environmental law that scholars interested in the subject, whether their background is environmental law or some other sub-discipline of legal studies, can rely on to expand the boundaries of the subject. Given the unsettled perimeter of environmental law as a field, the focus may come across as narrow to some, particularly to those who include a much wider set of contributions where comparison is not the specific focus of the work as part of comparative law. Yet references to that much wider body of work have been included, when comparison is a significant dimension of it. However, one of the reasons for the examination conducted in this article is to set a working perimeter not for environmental law as a field but for what can be specifically considered core work on ‘comparative environmental law’.

More specifically, the purpose of conducting this examination is three-fold. First, it pays tribute to a handful of visionary scholars who already in the 1970s foresaw the need to compare approaches to tackle the growing challenges arising from environmental degradation. The names of Robert Lutz, Nick Robinson, Peter Sand and Dan Tarlock should be mentioned, who, as will be seen, were early proposers of analytical grids for a comparative study of environmental law and/or specific studies of the systems that appeared as the most developed at the time. Second, a sufficient understanding of the range of approaches developed to respond to environmental challenges has never been as pressing as it is today. There have been suggestions, grounded in solid scientific work,Footnote 8 that the 2020–2030 decade is humanity's main window of opportunity to tackle environmental challenges with cascading repercussions for the planet, mainly climate change and ecosystems collapse. Understanding the overall social technology that humans have developed to organise, guide and govern efforts to combat environmental degradation is urgent, and comparative analysis seems a particularly promising technique to improve its effectiveness. Third, our understanding of such technology, including its strengths and limitations, is just beginning. Indeed, most of the analytical approaches proposed to undertake a comparative analysis of environmental law systems have remained at the level of proposal, ie they have not been effectively used to examine the entire field. Conceptual sophistication may well have turned into self-restraint, and clever critique into inaction, although, fortunately, not in every case.

The following sections briefly review what the reader of this article can expect to find in the literature on comparative environmental law and explain some of the basic choices underpinning the organisation of the material (Section II). Some of the most important contributions to the field of comparative environmental law are then examined (Section III), before a broader look is taken at the purposes of a comparative analysis of environmental law systems (Section IV). A brief note, before embarking on the analysis, should be made on the expression ‘environmental law systems’. This is used as synonymous of ‘environmental laws and policies’ of a given jurisdiction or other purely descriptive categories. The term ‘system’ is therefore non-technical. It is not claimed that the environmental laws and policies of, say, the United Kingdom, Japan, South Africa or Brazil have any specific coherence or systematicity. It is a merely descriptive reference, although it is acknowledged that part of the difficulty of comparing environmental law systems begins, as noted earlier, with the need to set a perimeter disentangling what is relevant from what is not.

II. THE STRUCTURE OF THE EXAMINATION

This article is based on a five-year research project aimed at identifying the main strands of past contributions, developing an analytical cartography and effectively applying it to the analysis of 16 jurisdictions from all continents, ten commonly faced issues (eg air pollution, water management, nature conservation, energy and climate change, waste, chemicals, etc), 18 infrastructural components (eg principles, regulatory organisation, property rights, etc) and policy intervention techniques (eg environmental impact assessment techniques, environmental taxes, trading schemes, etc), and five types of interactions with the wider body of domestic and international law (public, private and criminal law, and private and public international law).Footnote 9

This substantial collective research effort revealed the pervasiveness, in environmental law research, of brief or marginal references to a range of ‘others’ (other domestic systems, international law, transnational approaches, ‘global’ approaches)—what is referred to in the Overview as the first category of studies—but also the scarcity of research specifically focusing on comparative analysis. Within the latter, attempts at general or comprehensive comparison are even rarer, likely because of the great obstacles (practical, eg language, and intellectual, eg knowledge of different traditions) involved in focusing on broader aspects. In those cases where such broader aspects have been analysed, the testing grounds have more commonly been selective—what is referred to in the Overview as the second category of studies on risk regulation.

This may well be an unavoidable fact of comparative environmental law analysis, as the objects being compared are, for now, too numerous. The field is still at the early stages in which comparable constructs have not yet been distilled from the daunting diversity of reality. This is also what the above research project sought to provide, ie more manageable constructs capable of facilitating—without excessive distortion—a more detailed and deeper comparison. This article discusses much of the literature—specifically on comparative environmental law and focusing on broader aspects—on which the research project relied, as a way of paying tribute to forerunners, and steering interest in and encouraging further research on overcoming the limitations of the conceptual platform developed through the research project.

III. MAIN CONTRIBUTIONS

A. Foundational and Methodological Contributions

The analysis begins with a focus on foundational and methodological contributions. Given their birth beyond the circles of comparative law proper, the methodologies and approaches proposed are less coded and, indeed, less concerned with methodological debates. Unlike comparative lawyers, environmental lawyers do not see the question of methods and methodologies as existential,Footnote 10 hence the greater freedom—at its own peril of course—of this body of work. With these caveats in mind, a dozen or so contributions, spanning some 50 years of scholarship, address foundational and methodological matters.

The most remarkable early contribution for the scope of the research effort remains the long, detailed and rarely cited article by Robert E. Lutz in the American Journal of Comparative Law.Footnote 11 This study was preceded by what could be seen as narrower preparatory ‘sketches’.Footnote 12 If one is concerned with the doctrinal aspects examined in it, it is clearly outdated. But if one is in search of the ‘architecture’ or ‘ontology’ underpinning the organisation of environmental law systems at their inception, this contribution remains central, whether as a detailed snapshot of the approach at the time of publication or as a description of the lower sedimentary layers upon which current systems still rest.

Aside from Lutz's study, all the other contributions have remained at the level of a theoretical proposal, with only three exceptions: Peter Sand's early comparative study of three systems;Footnote 13 Nick Robinson's analytical grid of how to approach the study of comparative environmental law,Footnote 14 which stems from an earlier project and led to a massive collection of country studies;Footnote 15 and the Oxford Handbook of Comparative Environmental Law edited by Emma Lees and Jorge Viñuales.Footnote 16 In all other studies, the plan was announced but the passage à l'acte, the actual application of the methodology to the data to extract insights from the comparison, did not or has not materialise(d). This observation must be nuanced, however. The first nuance concerns the development of several issue-specific comparative methodologies. One example is Wiener et al's theorising of comparative nested analysis of representative case studies of risk regulation.Footnote 17 Another is Lees and Pedersen's methodology to conceptualise environmental adjudication.Footnote 18 In these and other cases, the methodology is effectively applied to the analysis of the topic, but there is no attempt, by design, to guide comparative analysis of the entire field. As for the second nuance, it is simply that the lack of application should in no way detract from the perspectives opened by these contributions.

Most notably, the contribution by Tarlock and Tarak, written in the early 1980s, reflects how much expectation was placed in the move from ‘regulation’ to ‘market mechanisms’ in the early days of environmental law.Footnote 19 That of Affolder, briefly illustrated by a discussion of the diffusion of environmental impact assessments, fleshes out much of what is implicit—and far from innocuous—in narratives about diffusion.Footnote 20 That of Morgera proposes the perspective of ‘global law’, applied to environmental law, as a possible methodological vantage point.Footnote 21 One can agree that the nation-based perspective has shaped the analytical approach and driven the focus on ‘international’ or ‘national’ (or comparative) law. The ‘global law’ perspective is a useful attempt to abandon this Nation-State-based coding and ontology to encompass more phenomena (eg transnational environmental governance, aboriginal laws, etc) and more interactions. Yet, the organisation of legal authority remains anchored in territorial units, mainly States and, exceptionally, supranational organisations such as the European Union (EU). This ‘institutional fact’, to use the terminology of philosopher J. Searle,Footnote 22 cannot simply be ignored, which places serious constraints on any attempts at conceptually ‘overcoming’ the limitations of Nation-State-centred accounts in comparative law analysis.

B. Topical Aspects

1. General observations

Beyond these studies on the foundations and methodologies of comparative environmental law, a larger number of contributions focus on what are, for mere convenience, called ‘topical aspects’. These contributions are closer to the first and second categories of work referred to in the Overview, in that they concentrate on certain specific issues. However, they are addressed in this examination for their significant, and sometimes highly sophisticated, treatment of the comparative dimension.

Importantly, in order to compare, these contributions generally craft a ‘comparable’ construct, which varies greatly in scope (from something as general as ‘constitutionalism’Footnote 23 or the management of ‘scientific uncertainty’Footnote 24 to something as specific as ‘environmental impact assessment’Footnote 25 or ‘oversight bodies’Footnote 26) and angle (eg ‘political systems’,Footnote 27 ‘regulatory organisation’,Footnote 28 ‘property rights’,Footnote 29 scientific-policy interfaces, courts,Footnote 30 liability,Footnote 31 planningFootnote 32). No ‘meta’ cartography capable of placing these ‘sub-sets’ within a broader ‘set’ (or series thereof) is offered. But this work effectively provided an important foundation for the development of such a cartography in the more recent work.Footnote 33

The main consideration in structuring such studies—and the broader cartography—is the identification/development of comparable constructs or concepts. ‘Topical’ constructs, to use a broad heading, can be contrasted with other types of constructs. In comparative law, the most frequent construct used has been the ‘national’ or ‘jurisdictional’ one. Environmental lawyers have kept this broad focus overall. This is not an arbitrary decision because, as noted earlier, the organisation of legal authority remains structured around States, with the main exception of the EU legal order, which relies nevertheless on States for implementation. Jurisdiction or State-based constructs are therefore important, even pivotal. Yet, they also have limitations, including the tendency to confine comparison to a similar ‘chapter structure’ in what are otherwise summaries of domestic legal systems, or the marginalisation of important phenomena such as transnational networks, private self-regulation, aboriginal law, among others. ‘Geographical’ constructs are a variation of national constructs of particular relevance when there is a certain level of real integration or harmonisation, such as in EU law.

‘Problem’- or ‘sector’-based constructs have also been used, mainly on the reasonable grounds, reminiscent of functionalism in comparative law methodology, that environmental law systems have to tackle common problems. Even then, there are many normative and conceptual implications in the definition of the boundaries of a ‘sector’. For example, should ‘climate change law’, as a sector, include ‘air pollution laws’ or ‘energy laws’, or even ‘forestry laws’? Unity based on common problems tends indeed to project conceptual boundaries onto a reality which is much more fluid and interconnected, particularly when, as in most systems, there are overarching sector-neutral environmental statutes applicable to most or all activities indistinctly.

Last, but not least, the criteria defining constructs can be combined to compare, for example, carbon taxation in EU countries (ie a topic within a sector within a region) or the judicial treatment in EU countries of scientific information on nature conservation. This is a trite observation, but it becomes much more complex when the combination involves more aggregate constructs, such as ‘risk regulation’ in the United States and ‘Europe’. Conceptual aggregations may have a stronger basis at given points in time (eg as EU-level regulation becomes more consolidated and occupies the essence of the legal space in the analytical unit ‘Europe’). However, environmental lawyers tend to use these aggregate categories as shortcuts, with less methodological scruples than comparative lawyers, who have long grappled with the complexities of identifying the right constructs for comparison.

All these analytical approaches have advantages and limitations. As will be discussed later in this article, a major consideration in selecting an approach is therefore the purpose pursued by the analysis. For now, this discussion facilitates the presentation of the ‘topical’ contributions.

2. Contributions with a sectorial focus

Several contributions adopt the problem-based or sectorial focus explained earlier. Some of these contributions take a broad look at the structure of the law concerning a resource, such as water,Footnote 34 or an environmental challenge, such as climate changeFootnote 35 or fisheries management,Footnote 36 taken as a whole. More frequently, however, the focus is ‘topical’ within a ‘sector’, such as ‘adaptation policies’ within climate change law,Footnote 37 wind energy regulation within the law of renewable energies,Footnote 38 or accountability mechanisms for markets for ecosystem services,Footnote 39 which can be seen as part of the broader law of nature conservation.

These pieces have an implicit or explicit jurisdictional or geographical focus. For example, Joanne Scott's intriguing article on the influence of REACH, a key EU Regulation in the chemical sector, explores the relations between the EU and the United States.Footnote 40 Broader constructs such as risk regulation also rely on an implicit or explicit geographical focus. When they go beyond a single jurisdiction—however general the stated purport of the analysis—they typically compare the United States to EuropeFootnote 41 or, more recently, to China.Footnote 42 Again, the reliance on complex legal constructs circumscribed by topic, sector, jurisdictional/geographical considerations as well as by broader analytical angles that capture transnational phenomena, illustrates the importance of defining the appropriate construct, which will enable and limit comparison.

3. Contributions with a jurisdictional or geographical focus

Other contributions focus on a ‘jurisdictional’ or ‘geographical’ construct or rely on it to explore a broader phenomenon, such as the increasing permeation of environmental law in a given continent. In most cases, the jurisdictional or geographical focus is further refined by reference to topical or sectorial angles. In some cases, the definition of the ‘construct’ is made more complex by reference to distinctions such as branches of law, eg ‘public law’, ‘private law’, ‘criminal law’, or cultural traditions, such as the tradition of ‘Islam’.

These contributions thus include jurisdictional pieces, eg on China,Footnote 43 KenyaFootnote 44 or the Soviet Union,Footnote 45 studies of regional patternsFootnote 46 or with a focus on regions,Footnote 47 and studies with a ‘branch’,Footnote 48 ‘topical’Footnote 49 and/or ‘cultural’ dimension.Footnote 50 These studies have been organised under the same heading to emphasise that there is work in the English language on a wide range of geographical areas, which can help the researcher to familiarise themselves with the broader context of a given country, topic or moment in history. That is no substitute for specialised contextual knowledge, but it is certainly useful as a springboard to acquire such knowledge or identify the main sources from which it can be derived.

Given that the jurisdictional and geographical focus is by far the most researched, essentially in studies and textbooks of domestic environmental law, only a handful are mentioned here. Those with a purely jurisdictional focus are not comparative law studies proper but ‘foreign’ law ones. Yet, the studies selected examine the target jurisdiction with an external eye, which seeks to derive lessons from its object to conduct a broader inquiry. Similarly, certain works which address a specific issue in general terms but, in earnest, rely mainly on extrapolation from a single legal system, with only implicit or ancillary reliance on comparative analysis, are not clearly works of comparative law. This is what is referred to, in the Overview, as the second category of works. Their lack of specific engagement with comparative legal analysis must not detract, however, from their potential to guide comparison. By providing an analytical grid, even if extrapolated from a single jurisdiction, they can help build analytical constructs for comparison, particularly of complex concepts such as risk regulation.

These different facets of the body of work reviewed here, taken together, provide a solid foundation for conducting research in comparative environmental law. They are also a stark reminder of the complexities involved in such an enterprise, particularly in the crafting of suitably comparable constructs. One key aspect of the process of crafting such constructs is the purpose pursued by the research. The article concludes with some considerations regarding purpose.

IV. THE PURPOSE OF COMPARING ENVIRONMENTAL LAW SYSTEMS

Efforts at comparing two or more realities may pursue a wide variety of purposes. More often than not, they seek to understand one of the two compared realities by achieving an external perspective enabled by the other one. In such cases, comparison is a detour to understand the features of the initial object better. For example, an investigation of public interest litigation systems in a foreign jurisdiction may aim to understand the shortcomings observed, but not fully understood, in the initial jurisdiction, with the end goal of reforming it.

Another related purpose is to rely on the conceptual categories of a known initial object to understand an external object. This purpose of comparative analysis is seldom a choice, as comparatists are ‘situated’, ie their perspective is shaped by certain categories (an ontology) which they consciously or unconsciously project onto the external object, whether this is a contemporary object or a past object. In the latter case, such projection, if not careful, may result in blatant anachronisms. Such would be the case, for example, of studying the ‘environmental law’ of the nineteenth century. The same excess of projection can occur if an ontology is projected onto realities that are coded differently (eg projecting the right to private property onto certain forms of aboriginal land tenure/management). Even when great care is taken to let the target object ‘speak’ for itself, interpretation of the phenomena will be shaped by the enquirer's own categories, hence the need for confrontation with others whose views are initially coded in the terms of the target reality. The purpose, in these cases, is to understand the target reality, although such understanding will often be illuminating for a re-appropriation of the initial—framing—object.

A third purpose is to identify and evaluate the performance of legal institutions or mechanisms borrowed or, in other words, ‘transplanted’ into other legal systems. Certain legal mechanisms were first developed in a specific jurisdiction (a frequently given example is the technique of ‘environmental impact assessment’, which was introduced in the National Environmental Policy Act of the United StatesFootnote 51) and subsequently taken up, usually with some adjustments, in other jurisdictions. Such analysis can be an intermediary step to evaluate performance (or lack thereof) or incremental refinements and change. At a granular level, it provides the basis for two alternative policy guidance approaches, namely ‘best practices’ and ‘best fit’. The former has lost some ground in favour of the latter, precisely because straight transplants may not work in a different context.

A fourth purpose of comparative analysis is to understand neither the initial nor the target reality but the conceptual categories that are projected, as such. Such an investigation focuses on the realisation and spelling out of the very ontology that is consciously or unconsciously projected. Such realisation and formulation may be a goal in itself, as with critical and deconstructionist approaches, or a stepping stone for unmasking a network of power relations. It may also pursue a further objective, which is to contrast or ‘test’ the formulation of the ontology in order to refine it. The end goal of such conceptual investigation may be the conscious elaboration of ‘comparable’ constructs (to pursue subsequently one of the other purposes discussed so far) or the understanding of what is common to all the realities studied. The latter goal, the understanding of the ‘architecture’ of environmental law by means of comparative analysis, was the main purpose of the above-mentioned five-year research project on comparative environmental law.Footnote 52

This examination of the most relevant literature is one of the outcomes of that broader project. The intention is not to persuade the reader to use the knowledge and analysis gathered in this body of work for any specific purpose. But it may be useful to note why, despite the many obstacles this body of work faces, its overall purpose deserves consideration. Humanity faces a truly unprecedented challenge, historically and even pre-historically. Human activity has turned into a disruptive force of geological proportions threatening the very conditions under which humanity has thrived in the last 11,700 years. As noted earlier, there are indications that action is needed within a closing window of a decade, ie an infinitely small time period in geological or even historical terms. And the main technology humanity has developed so far to organise, guide and govern its response to environmental degradation is environmental law, taken as a whole. Understanding this overall technology, with its shortcomings but also its potential, has never been as critical as it is today.

Acknowledgements

The author gratefully acknowledges the research assistance of Justina Uriburu and Francisco Quintana.

References

1 Marginal references are made to it in David, R et al, International Encyclopaedia of Comparative Law (Mouton/JCB Mohr 1971ff) vols 1–17Google Scholar, followed by instalments 18 to 42 (with some instalment gaps), edited by K Zweigert and K Drobnig. Environmental law is also omitted from the following more recent works: Smits, JM (ed), Elgar Encyclopaedia of Comparative Law (2nd edn, Edward Elgar 2014)Google Scholar; Reimann, M and Zimmermann, R (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Law (2nd edn, OUP 2019)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bussani, M and Mattei, U (eds), Cambridge Companion to Comparative Law (CUP 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

2 For a survey of the field, see Heyvaert, V and Duvic-Paoli, L-A (eds), Research Handbook on Transnational Environmental Law (Edward Elgar 2020)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. This analytical lens has its own dedicated journal, Transnational Environmental Law, which publishes a variety of contributions, including—but not limited to—articles relying on this specific theoretical approach.

3 See, eg, Morgera, E, ‘Global Environmental Law and Comparative Legal Methods’ (2015) 24 RECIEL 254CrossRefGoogle Scholar, proposing the lenses of ‘global environmental law’.

4 An exception is J Darpö and A Nilsson, ‘On the Comparison of Environmental Law’ (2010) 3 JCtInnovation 315, who discuss the functionalist school as well as some of its shortcomings.

5 The literature to be reviewed in this regard would include a vast number of environmental law studies which contain brief comparative references. When such references are substantial enough to consider the work as one of comparative law, such studies are specifically addressed in this examination.

6 See, eg, Jasanoff, S, The Fifth Branch: Science Advisers as Policymakers (Harvard University Press 1990)Google Scholar; Jasanoff, S, Science at the Bar: Law, Science, and Technology in America (Harvard University Press 1995)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Fisher, E, Risk Regulation and Administrative Constitutionalism (Hart Publishing 2007)Google Scholar; Macrory, R, Regulation, Enforcement and Governance in Environmental Law (2nd edn, Hart Publishing 2014)Google Scholar (collection of previous articles and contributions).

7 This body of works dates back, for the most part—but not exclusively—to the 1970s and early 1980s. See M Parks, ‘Commentary’ [comparative study of reports] in Woodrow Wilson International Centre for Scholars (ed), The Human Environment, Vol II: Summary of National Reports Submitted in Preparation of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (Washington, DC 1972) 103–9; Sand, PH, Legal Systems for Environment Protection: Japan, Sweden, United States (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations 1972)Google Scholar; N Geigel Lope-Bello, Cuatro Estudios de Casos sobre Protección Ambiental: Inglaterra, Suecia, Francia, Estados Unidos (Fondo Editorial Común 1973); JC Juergensmeyer, Comparative Materials of Land, Natural Resources and Environmental Law (University of Florida 1973); G Amendola, La normativa ambientale nei paesi della Comunità Europea (Giuffré 1975); Lutz, RE, ‘An Essay on Harmonizing National Environmental Laws and Policies’ (1975) 1 EnvtlPolyL 132Google Scholar; Lutz, RE, ‘Harmonizing National Environmental Laws and Policies (Part II)’ (1976) 1 EnvtlPolyL 162Google Scholar; J Nowak (ed), Environmental Law: International and Comparative Aspects. A Symposium. Papers presented at the Conference on International Environmental Law held in London on September 1–3, 1975 (British Institute of International and Comparative Law 1976); J McLoughlin (ed), The Law and Practice Relating to Pollution Control in the Member States of the European Communities (Graham & Trotman 1976) vols 1–9; a symposium which brought comparative environmental law within the radar of the American Journal of Comparative Law, including two contributions on foreign law (by E Rehbinder and S Bufford) and a wide-ranging comparative study, RE Lutz, ‘The Laws of Environmental Management: A Comparative Study’ (1976) 24 AmJCompL 447; S Ercman (ed), European Environmental Law: Legal and Economic Appraisal (Bubenberg-Verlag 1977); AC Gross and NE Scott, ‘Comparative Environmental Legislation and Action’ (1980) 29 ICLQ 619; M Prieur (ed), Forêts et environnement en droit comparé et international (Presses Universitaires de France 1984); M Prieur (ed), Sites contaminés en droit comparé de l'environnement (PULIM 1995); and a dossier coordinated by M Hauterau-Boutonnet and E Truilhe-Marengo for the Revue juridique de l'environnement (vol 40(2), 2015, 211–56) on ‘Regards thématiques sur le droit comparé de l'environnement’ (with detailed bibliographic references to key studies on the domestic environmental laws of different jurisdictions). There are also two comprehensive works. One is a loose-leaf compilation of studies on the environmental laws of over 60 countries and jurisdictions: E Burleson, LH Lye and N Robinson (eds), Comparative Environmental Law and Regulation (West Law 2011–17) vols I–III. The other is the more recent effort to provide a systematic overview of the field as a foundation for further study: E Lees and JE Viñuales (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Environmental Law (OUP 2019). For a detailed survey of the literature, see JE Viñuales, ‘Comparative Environmental Law: Structuring a Field’ in Lees and Viñuales, ibid 5–7, 17–23.

8 See McKay, DI Armstrong et al, ‘Exceeding 1.5°C Global Warming Could Trigger Multiple Climate Tipping Points’ (2022) 377 Science 1171Google Scholar.

9 For an explanation of this methodology, see Viñuales (n 7).

10 See Reimann, M, ‘The Progress and Failure of Comparative Law in the Second Half of the Twentieth Century’ (2002) 50 AmJCompL 671, 683Google Scholar (surveying the position of different scholars on this debate).

11 Lutz, ‘The Laws of Environmental Management: A Comparative Study’ (n 7).

12 Lutz, ‘An Essay on Harmonizing National Environmental Laws and Policies’ (n 7); Lutz, ‘Harmonizing National Environmental Laws and Policies (Part II)’ (n 7).

13 Sand (n 7).

14 NA Robinson, ‘Comparative Environmental Law: Evaluating How Legal Systems Address “Sustainable Development”’ (1997) 27 EnvtlPolyL 338.

15 Burleson, Lye and Robinson (n 7). The idea of this project was launched by Robinson in the early 1970s and reached its initial completion in 1996. The 1996 collection of country studies has been continued and extended by Robinson, Burleson and Lye through a loose-leaf collection which is regularly updated.

16 Lees and Viñuales (n 7).

17 JB Wiener et al, ‘Theorizing and Generalizing about Risk Assessment and Regulation through Comparative Nested Analysis of Representative Cases’ (2009) 31 Law&Pol 236.

18 E Lees and O Pedersen, Environmental Adjudication (Hart Publishing 2022).

19 D Tarlock and P Tarak, ‘An Overview of Comparative Environmental Law’ (1983) 13 DenvJIntlL&Pol 85.

20 N Affolder, ‘Contagious Environmental Lawmaking’ (2019) 31 JEL 187.

21 See Morgera (n 3).

22 J Searle, Making the Social World (OUP 2011) ch 1.

23 See JR May and E Daly, Global Environmental Constitutionalism (CUP 2014); R O'Gorman, ‘Environmental Constitutionalism: A Comparative Study’ (2017) 6 TEL 435; O Pedersen, ‘Environmental Law and Constitutional and Public Law’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 173–90.

24 See H Li, J Xu and JB Wiener, ‘Comparing Environmental Risk Regulations in China and the United States’ (2022) 42 RiskAnal 730; E Fisher, ‘Sciences, Environmental Laws and Legal Cultures: Fostering Collective Epistemic Responsibilities’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 749–68; JB Wiener et al (eds), The Reality of Precaution: Comparing Risk Regulation in the United States and Europe (Routledge 2011); J Jones, ‘Regulatory Design for Scientific Uncertainty: Acknowledging the Diversity of Approaches in Environmental Regulation and Public Administration’ (2007) 19 JEL 347; JK Hammitt et al, ‘Precautionary Regulation in Europe and the United States: A Quantitative Comparison’ (2005) 25 RiskAnal 1215; M Eliantonio, E Lees and T Paloniitty (eds), EU Environmental Principles and Scientific Uncertainty before National Courts: The Case of the Habitats Directive (Hart Publishing 2022).

25 See N Craik, ‘The Assessment of Environmental Impact’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 876–99; NA Robinson, ‘International Trends in Environmental Impact Assessment’ (1992) 19 BCEnvtlAffLRev 591.

26 See J Wiener, ‘Comparing Regulatory Oversight Bodies: The US Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs and the EU Regulatory Scrutiny Board’ in S Rose-Ackerman, P Lindseth and B Emersion (eds), Comparative Administrative Law (2nd edn, Edward Elgar 2017) 333–51.

27 See S Graben and E Biber, ‘Presidents, Parliaments and Legal Change: Quantifying the Effects of Political Systems in Comparative Environmental Law’ (2017) 35 VaEnvtlLJ 357.

28 See B Preston, ‘Regulatory Organization’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 719–48; N Gunningham, ‘Environment Law, Regulation and Governance: Shifting Architectures’ (2009) 21 JEL 179; J Wiener, ‘The Diffusion of Regulatory Oversight’ in MA Livermore and RL Revesz (eds), Globalization of Cost–Benefit Analysis in Environmental Policy (OUP 2013) 123–41.

29 See CP Rodgers, ‘Property Systems and Environmental Regulation’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 703–18; DH Cole (ed), Pollution and Property: Comparing Ownership Institutions for Environmental Protection (CUP 2003).

30 Lees and Pedersen (n 18); Lord Carnwarth, ‘Judges and the Common Laws of the Environment—At Home and Abroad’ (2014) 26 JEL 177; B Preston, ‘Characteristics of Successful Environmental Courts and Tribunals’ (2014) 26 JEL 365.

31 A Monti, ‘Environmental Risk: A Comparative Law and Economics Approach to Liability and Insurance’ (2001) 9 ERPL 51; M Hinteregger (ed), Environmental Liability and Ecological Damage in European Law (CUP 2008); E Orlando, ‘From Domestic to Global? Recent Trends in Environmental Liability from a Multi-level and Comparative Law Perspective’ (2015) 24 RECIEL 289; M Hinteregger, ‘Environmental Liability’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 1025–43.

32 See W Jin, ‘Environmental Planning’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 815–33.

33 Viñuales (n 7) 26–8.

34 P Cullet, ‘Water Law in a Globalised World: The Need for a New Conceptual Framework’ (2011) 23 JEL 233; D Tarlock, ‘Environmental Regulation of Freshwater’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 418–37.

35 M Mehling, ‘The Comparative Law of Climate Change: A Research Agenda’ (2015) 24 RECIEL 341; E Scotford and S Minas, ‘Probing the Hidden Depths of Climate Law: Analysing National Climate Change Legislation’ (2018) 28 RECIEL 67; J Gundlach and M Gerrard, ‘Climate Change and Energy Transition Policies’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 531–77.

36 G Winter (ed), Towards Sustainable Fisheries Law: A Comparative Analysis (IUCN 2009); T Markus, ‘Regulation of Marine Capture Fisheries’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 489–508.

37 DA Farber, ‘The Challenge of Climate Change Adaptation: Learning from National Planning Efforts in Britain, China and the USA’ (2011) 23 JEL 359.

38 H Tegner Anker, B Egelund Olsen and A Ronne (eds), Wind Energy and Legal Systems: A Comparative Perspective (Wolters Kluwer 2008).

39 RL Glicksman and T Kaime, ‘A Comparative Analysis of Accountability Mechanisms for Ecosystem Services Markets in the United States and the European Union’ (2013) 2 TEL 259.

40 J Scott, ‘From Brussels with Love: The Transatlantic Travels of European Law and the Chemistry of Regulatory Attraction’ (2009) 57 AmJCompL 897.

41 D Vogel, The Politics of Precaution: Regulating Health, Safety, and Environmental Risks in Europe and the United States (Princeton University Press 2012); Wiener et al (n 24); Hammitt et al (n 24).

42 Li, Xu and Wiener (n 24).

43 AL Wang, ‘The Search for Sustainable Legitimacy: Environmental Law and Bureaucracy in China’ (2013) 37 HarvEnvtlLRev 365; W Xi, ‘People's Republic of China’ in Lees and Viñuales (n 7) 128–48.

44 CB Soyapi, ‘Environmental Protection in Kenya's Environment and Land Court’ (2019) 31 JEL 151.

45 N Robinson, ‘Soviet Environmental Law and Perestroika’ (1988) 18(6) EnvtlPolyL 224–7.

46 W Scholtz and J Verschuuren (eds), Regional Environmental Law: Transregional Comparative Lessons in Pursuit of Sustainable Development (Edward Elgar 2015).

47 B Boer, ‘The Rise of Environmental Law in the Asian Region’ (1998) 32 URichLRev 1503; MT Cirelli and E Morgera, ‘Wildlife Law and the Legal Empowerment of the Poor in Sub-Saharan Africa: New Case Studies’ (FAO Legal Papers Online, May 2009) <https://www.fao.org/documents/card/en?details=3891d0e7-e16a-4717-be42-26ddd64c91b2%2f>; N Kimani, ‘A Collaborative Approach to Environmental Governance in East Africa’ (2009) 22 JEL 27.

48 Faure, M, ‘The Development of Environmental Criminal Law in the EU and its Member States’ (2017) 26 RECIEL 139CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

49 Anker, H Tegner et al, ‘Coping with EU Environmental Legislation: Transposition Principles and Practices’ (2015) 27 JEL 17Google Scholar; Anker, H Tegner et al, ‘The Role of Courts in Environmental Law—a Nordic Comparative Study’ (2009) NordicEnvtlLJ 9Google Scholar; Fasoli, E, ‘The Possibilities for Nongovernmental Organizations Promoting Environmental Protection to Claim Damages in Relation to the Environment in France, Italy, the Netherlands and Portugal’ (2017) 26 RECIEL 30CrossRefGoogle Scholar; A Anisimov and J Kayushnikova, ‘Trends and Prospects for Legislative Regulation of Legal Responsibility for Environmental Offences in BRICS Countries: Comparative Law’ (2019) 6 BRICSLJ 82.

50 Roughton, GE, ‘The Ancient and the Modern: Environmental Law and Governance in Islam’ (2007) 32 ColumJEnvtlL 99Google Scholar.

51 The diffusion of environmental impact assessments has received significant attention, as well as some criticism of the discourse underpinning it. See, eg, Robinson (n 25); Wiener, J and Ribeiro, DL, ‘Impact Assessment: Diffusion and Integration’ in Bignami, F and Zaring, D (eds), Comparative Law and Regulation (Edward Elgar 2018) 159–89Google Scholar; Affolder (n 20).

52 See Lees and Viñuales (n 7).