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Friends of the Earth & Legal Interdisciplinarity: Introduction by the Analysis Editors

Bell, Joanna ; Bogojevic, Sanja LU orcid and Hamlyn, Olivia (2021) In Journal of Environmental Law 33(2). p.437-440
Abstract
What counts as environmental law adjudication? Or to put it differently; how do we decide which cases demand attention in an environmental law journal, such as this one? Is it the relevance of environmental legislation to the court’s legal reasoning, or would the mere reference to environmental problems and their related laws do? In either case, the net is cast wide. Environmental disputes are undoubtedly on the rise, and judges are increasingly called on to resolve these in courtrooms around the globe.1 Our point, however, does not concern the speed or the surge of environmental law jurisprudence but rather the drawing of its outer limits. Take HS2,2 as an example. Here, the Supreme Court was asked to consider some of the leading... (More)
What counts as environmental law adjudication? Or to put it differently; how do we decide which cases demand attention in an environmental law journal, such as this one? Is it the relevance of environmental legislation to the court’s legal reasoning, or would the mere reference to environmental problems and their related laws do? In either case, the net is cast wide. Environmental disputes are undoubtedly on the rise, and judges are increasingly called on to resolve these in courtrooms around the globe.1 Our point, however, does not concern the speed or the surge of environmental law jurisprudence but rather the drawing of its outer limits. Take HS2,2 as an example. Here, the Supreme Court was asked to consider some of the leading decisions of the Court of Justice of the EU on the Environmental Impact Assessment and the Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) directives,3 but the case, perhaps more significantly, contributed to the contouring of British constitutional law, and its relationship to the EU legal order.4 Is then HS2 an environmental or a constitutional law case? Obviously, we should not need to make this too sharp a distinction, especially as environmental disputes commonly cut across legal fields. But how we label cases matters in how we understand the nature of the environmental dispute at play. Given the polycentricity of environmental problems and the tendency of environmental disputes to transcend legal fields, we gain much by moving away from studies of cases in silos of distinct legal sub-disciplines towards an approach grounded in legal interdisciplinarity. And so, as a new Editorial team for the analysis section, we invited different legal perspectives on the UK Supreme Court (UKSC) decision in Friends of the Earth (FOE). (Less)
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author
; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Environmental Law, Adjudication, EU law, Miljörätt, EU-rätt
in
Journal of Environmental Law
volume
33
issue
2
pages
437 - 440
publisher
Oxford University Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:85114335689
ISSN
1464-374X
DOI
10.1093/jel/eqab011
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
7505873c-d5de-4937-aeaf-7aaca29c069c
date added to LUP
2023-02-26 12:11:38
date last changed
2023-03-02 13:26:34
@article{7505873c-d5de-4937-aeaf-7aaca29c069c,
  abstract     = {{What counts as environmental law adjudication? Or to put it differently; how do we decide which cases demand attention in an environmental law journal, such as this one? Is it the relevance of environmental legislation to the court’s legal reasoning, or would the mere reference to environmental problems and their related laws do? In either case, the net is cast wide. Environmental disputes are undoubtedly on the rise, and judges are increasingly called on to resolve these in courtrooms around the globe.1 Our point, however, does not concern the speed or the surge of environmental law jurisprudence but rather the drawing of its outer limits. Take HS2,2 as an example. Here, the Supreme Court was asked to consider some of the leading decisions of the Court of Justice of the EU on the Environmental Impact Assessment and the Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) directives,3 but the case, perhaps more significantly, contributed to the contouring of British constitutional law, and its relationship to the EU legal order.4 Is then HS2 an environmental or a constitutional law case? Obviously, we should not need to make this too sharp a distinction, especially as environmental disputes commonly cut across legal fields. But how we label cases matters in how we understand the nature of the environmental dispute at play. Given the polycentricity of environmental problems and the tendency of environmental disputes to transcend legal fields, we gain much by moving away from studies of cases in silos of distinct legal sub-disciplines towards an approach grounded in legal interdisciplinarity. And so, as a new Editorial team for the analysis section, we invited different legal perspectives on the UK Supreme Court (UKSC) decision in Friends of the Earth (FOE).}},
  author       = {{Bell, Joanna and Bogojevic, Sanja and Hamlyn, Olivia}},
  issn         = {{1464-374X}},
  keywords     = {{Environmental Law; Adjudication; EU law; Miljörätt; EU-rätt}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{437--440}},
  publisher    = {{Oxford University Press}},
  series       = {{Journal of Environmental Law}},
  title        = {{Friends of the Earth & Legal Interdisciplinarity: Introduction by the Analysis Editors}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jel/eqab011}},
  doi          = {{10.1093/jel/eqab011}},
  volume       = {{33}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}