Journal article 1848 views
Rio +20, the Green Economy and Re-orienting Sustainable Development
Environmental Law Review, Volume: 14, Issue: 4, Pages: 166 - 297
Swansea University Author: Karen Morrow
Abstract
This article critiques the green economy initiative in the run up to and following the Rio+20 United Nations Summit on Sustainable Development 2012. It first considers the location of the green economy initiative in the sustainablity debate. It goes on to discuss the United Nation's institution...
Published in: | Environmental Law Review |
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2012
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https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1350/enlr.2012.14.4.166 |
URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa13345 |
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2019-06-17T10:30:34.3928910 v2 13345 2012-11-23 Rio +20, the Green Economy and Re-orienting Sustainable Development bd81527adf441ea93955f1ccec802a0e 0000-0002-0139-5804 Karen Morrow Karen Morrow true false 2012-11-23 LAWD This article critiques the green economy initiative in the run up to and following the Rio+20 United Nations Summit on Sustainable Development 2012. It first considers the location of the green economy initiative in the sustainablity debate. It goes on to discuss the United Nation's institutional buy-in to the green economy project and the attitudes of states and major groups towards it. The piece concludes by observing the impact and implications of emerging new alignments and ideological positions within the international community on the green economy initiative and the summit's outcome document 'The Future We Want'. Journal Article Environmental Law Review 14 4 166 297 sustainable development, green economy, Pachamama 1 12 2012 2012-12-01 https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1350/enlr.2012.14.4.166 Adopted on reading lists is S. Africa and Italy, cited in S. Turner, 'A Global Environmental Right' (forthcoming 2013, Routledge, London). COLLEGE NANME Law COLLEGE CODE LAWD Swansea University 2019-06-17T10:30:34.3928910 2012-11-23T09:22:48.0171892 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law Karen Morrow 0000-0002-0139-5804 1 |
title |
Rio +20, the Green Economy and Re-orienting Sustainable Development |
spellingShingle |
Rio +20, the Green Economy and Re-orienting Sustainable Development Karen Morrow |
title_short |
Rio +20, the Green Economy and Re-orienting Sustainable Development |
title_full |
Rio +20, the Green Economy and Re-orienting Sustainable Development |
title_fullStr |
Rio +20, the Green Economy and Re-orienting Sustainable Development |
title_full_unstemmed |
Rio +20, the Green Economy and Re-orienting Sustainable Development |
title_sort |
Rio +20, the Green Economy and Re-orienting Sustainable Development |
author_id_str_mv |
bd81527adf441ea93955f1ccec802a0e |
author_id_fullname_str_mv |
bd81527adf441ea93955f1ccec802a0e_***_Karen Morrow |
author |
Karen Morrow |
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Karen Morrow |
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Journal article |
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Environmental Law Review |
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14 |
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4 |
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166 |
publishDate |
2012 |
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Swansea University |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law |
url |
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1350/enlr.2012.14.4.166 |
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description |
This article critiques the green economy initiative in the run up to and following the Rio+20 United Nations Summit on Sustainable Development 2012. It first considers the location of the green economy initiative in the sustainablity debate. It goes on to discuss the United Nation's institutional buy-in to the green economy project and the attitudes of states and major groups towards it. The piece concludes by observing the impact and implications of emerging new alignments and ideological positions within the international community on the green economy initiative and the summit's outcome document 'The Future We Want'. |
published_date |
2012-12-01T03:15:17Z |
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1763750253212729344 |
score |
11.037319 |