Cover von: The Principle of Common Concern and Climate Change
Anirudh Shingal, Baris Karapinar, Joëlle de Sépibus, Philipp Aerni, Sofya Matteotti, Thomas Cottier

The Principle of Common Concern and Climate Change

Rubrik: Abhandlungen
Jahrgang 52 (2014) / Heft 3, S. 293-324 (32)
Publiziert 09.07.2018
DOI 10.1628/000389214X14186502494027
Veröffentlicht auf Englisch.
  • Artikel PDF
  • lieferbar
  • 10.1628/000389214X14186502494027
Beschreibung
Effective policies combating global warming and incentivising reduction of greenhouse gases face fundamental collective action problems. States defending short term interests avoid international commitments and seek to benefit from measures combating global warming taken elsewhere. The paper explores the potential of Common Concern as an emerging principle of international law, in particular international environmental law, in addressing collective action problems and the global commons. It expounds the contours of the principle, its relationship to common heritage of mankind, to shared and differentiated responsibility and to public goods. It explores its potential to provide the foundations not only for international cooperation, but also to justify, and delimitate at the same time, unilateral action at home and deploying extraterritorial effects in addressing the challenges of global warming and climate change mitigation. As unilateral measures mainly translate into measures of trade policy, the principle of Common Concern is inherently linked and limited by existing legal disciplines in particular of the law of the World Trade Organization.