Compensation for environmental damages under international law

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_703C98B1B2D7
Type
PhD thesis: a PhD thesis.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Compensation for environmental damages under international law
Author(s)
Hardman Reis T.
Director(s)
Ziegler A.
Institution details
Université de Lausanne, Faculté de droit et des sciences criminelles
Address
Décanat de la Faculté de droit
et des sciences criminelles
Unil / Internef 412
1015 Lausanne-Dorigny
Publication state
Accepted
Issued date
2010
Language
english
Number of pages
274
Notes
REROID:R005738761
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The purpose of this research is to clarify the contribution of international dispute adjudication mechanisms in regard to environmental protection. Most specifically, the study aims to identify and develop the criterion adopted by the international judge in relation to the compensation for environmental damages. In this perspective, the study identifies some gaps between international responsibility and environmental protection interests.
The premise sustained all along the study is that compensation is determinant to conciliate environmental prerogatives with mechanisms of international adjudication, in particular the system of international responsibility. Supported by the analysis of treaties, international decisions and secondary sources, the thesis defends the idea that some elements of international law allow the adjudicator to adapt the compensation to attend certain environmental interests, creating a new approach which was entitled 'fair compensation'.
The antithesis of this approach is the idea that compensation in international law is limited exclusively to the strict reparation of the material losses incurred by the victim. As a synthesis, the study defends the specificity of environmental damages in relation to other kind of damages that are subject to compensation under international law. The measure upon which compensation for environmental damages could be classified as a specific type of damage under international law remains to be determined.
The main conclusion of the study is that the existing standard of compensation defined by the theory and practice of international law is impossible to be strictly respected in cases involving environmental damages. This limitation is mainly due to the complexity of the notion of environment, which is constantly conflicting with the anthropologic view of legal theory. The study supports the idea that the establishment of a 'fair compensation' which takes into account the political, legal and technical context of the environmental damage, is the best possible approach to conciliate internationally responsibility and environmental interests. This could be implemented by the observance of certain elements by the international judge/arbitrator through a case-by-case analysis.
Create date
08/02/2011 12:46
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:28
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