The latest issue of the Review of European, Comparative & International Environmental Law (vol. 29, n°2, July 2020) is out with a Special Issue on "Assessing the EU 2030 Climate and Energy Policy Framework".
Editorial
Claire Dupont, Kati Kulovesi, Harro van Asselt, Editorial: Governing the EU’s climate and energy transition through the 2030 Framework
Special Issue Articles: Assessing the EU 2030 Climate and Energy Policy Framework
Kati Kulovesi, Sebastian Oberthür, Assessing the EU’s 2030 Climate and Energy Policy Framework: Incremental change toward radical transformation?
Diarmuid Torney, Roderic O’Gorman, Adaptability versus certainty in a carbon emissions reduction regime: An assessment of the EU’s 2030 Climate and Energy Policy Framework
Stephen Minas, EU climate law sans frontières: The extension of the 2030 Framework to the Energy Community contracting parties
Sanja Bogojević, Human rights of minors and future generations: Global trends and EU environmental law particularities
Marjan Peeters & Natassa Athanasiadou, The continued effort sharing approach in EU climate law: Binding targets, challenging enforcement?
Annalisa Savaresi, Lucia Perugini, Maria Vincenza Chiriacò, Making sense of the LULUCF Regulation: Much ado about nothing?
Alessandro Monti, Beatriz Martinez Romera, Fifty shades of binding: Appraising the enforcement toolkit for the EU’s 2030 renewable energy targets
Joshua Roberts, Power to the people? Implications of the Clean Energy Package for the role of community ownership in Europe’s energy transition
Theodoros G. Iliopoulos Matteo Fermeglia Bernard Vanheusden, The EU’s 2030 Climate and Energy Policy Framework: How net metering slips through its net
Original Articles
Ellycia R. Harrould‐Kolieb, The UN Convention on the Law of the Sea: A governing framework for ocean acidification?
Jingjing Zhao, The role of international organizations in preventing conflicts between the SPS Agreement and the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety
Laura Movilla Pateiro, Advances and uncertainties in compliance measures for users from the Nagoya Protocol in the European Union
Alessandra Guida, The 2017 Fidenato case and the 2015 Directive: The curious case of GMOs in Europe
Case Note
Rafael Tamayo‐Álvarez, David Aven v. Costa Rica: A step forward towards investor accountability for environmental harm?
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