PART Ⅰ THE ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN OF ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE 3
1 Instruments for environmental governance: what works?&Michael G. Faure 3
2 Does (property) diversity beget (landscape) sustainability?&John Page and Ann Brower 24
3 Creating next generation rural landscape governance:the challenge for environmental law scholarship&Paul Martin, Jacqueline Williams and Amanda Kennedy 46
PART Ⅱ GOVERNANCE INNOVATION IN CHINA 81
4 Constitutionalism and the environment: the evolution of environmental governance in China’s Socialist Market Economy&Kishan Khoday 81
5 Toward a more effective environmental criminal law in China&Michael G. Faure and Hao Zhang 104
6 A feasible approach to environmental public interest litigation:the people’s procuratorate as plaintiff&Mei Hong and Yin Yanjie 135
7 Environmental e-governance in China: insights from government-citizen interaction&Qin Tianbao and Wang Huanhuan 148
PART Ⅲ THE INTERSECTION OF ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL JUSTICE AROUND WATER LAWS 171
8 Global climate disruption and water law reform in the United States&Joseph W. Dellapenna 171
9 The legal protection of Ramsar Wetlands: Australian reforms&Alex Gardner 193
10 Drinking water security in China: a critical justice issue&Ke jian 218
PART Ⅳ LINKING LOCAL AND INTERNATIONAL LEGAL INNOVATIONS 233
11 The quest for a World Environment Organization: reflections on a failing debate as an input for future improvement&Nils Goeteyn and Frank Maes 233
12 Human rights law, refugee and migration law, and environmental law: exploring their contributions in the context of ‘environmental migration’&Michele Morel 248
13 Climate change: legal impediments to technology transfer&Zhou Chen 266
14 Implementing stewardship in Kenyan land use law: the case for a sustainability extension&Robert Kibugi 288
Index 313