The protection of biodiversity through an international treaty underpinning a global regulatory regime has been accepted as the necessary legal and political structure for at least the last two decades. Based on a simple spatial and jurisdictional equation, the idea that a globally defined environmental problem of biodiversity loss has to be addressed by a similarly global mechanism appears self-evident. But this belief in the scope and scale of international environmental law, in its formalist process and eventual substantive effectiveness, is a political truth that possesses its own...
The protection of biodiversity through an international treaty underpinning a global regulatory regime has been accepted as the necessary legal and...
This book employs a Foucaultian genealogical method to present an expanded, detailed and critical history of the discursive and practical use of biodiversity in international law. It draws from environmental history, philosophy of science, political economy and development studies.
This book employs a Foucaultian genealogical method to present an expanded, detailed and critical history of the discursive and practical use of biodi...