Beschreibung:
Volume 13 of the EYIEL focuses on "Climate Change and Liability". The volume starts with a distinguished essay about the decision of the German Constitutional Court on the Climate Change Act in a European and international context. The following contributions consider different aspects of climate change in international economic law.
Editorial.- PART I - Climate Change & Liability.- Climate Change Challenges Constitutional Law: Contextualising the German Federal Constitutional Courts Climate Jurisprudence within Climate Constitutionalism.- Trans-Nationally Determined Contributions for climate justice: Resolving a Paris Agreement's contradiction that is working against developing states.- The Green Climate Fund, Climate Change and Corporate Due Diligence: What Role for the Private Facility Sector?.- Market Access Conditionality and Border Carbon Adjustments.- Removing Barriers to Climate Change Litigation: The Progressive Erosion of Central Banks' Immunity.- The WTO Panel Report on US-Safeguard Measure on PV Products: A Decisive Victory for the Fight Against Climate Change?.- The Innovative Trade and Climate Action-Linkage in the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement - A Template for the EU's New Approach to Green Trade Agreements.- The Investment Treaty Regime and the Clean Energy Transition.- Making the Energy Charter Treaty Climate-Friendly: An (Almost) Impossible Leap.- Making Finance Flows Consistent with the Aims of the Paris Agreement - Roles, Obligations, and Limitations of the EU Banking Sector and Its Regulatory and Supervisory Institutions.- The Double Materiality Principle (Article 19a NFRD) as Proposed by the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive - An Effective Concept to Tackle Green Washing?.- Assessing the Climate of 'Shareholder based Climate Change Litigation' in the Global South.- From Unilateral Border Carbon Adjustments to Cooperation in Climate Clubs: Rethinking Exclusion in Light of Trade and Climate Law Constraints.- Environmental and Sustainability Aspects in EU Competition Law - Towards a "More Economic & Ecological Approach" under Article 101 TFEU?.- Climate-Related Individual Rights Under EU Secondary Law and Limitations to Their Material Scope.- Reducing GHG Emissions in a Constitutional Democracy - When EU Civil Courts adjust the EU Emission Trading System.- The Proposed EU Regulation on Trade in Forest-Risk Commodities (FRCs): A First Assessment.- PART II - Current Challenges, Development and Events in European and International Economic Law.- Seven Years Inside the Trade Defence Machinery Room - How Political is the European Commission?.