Established in 2010

About MEPIELAN eBulletin

MEPIELAN E-Bulletin is a digital academic and practitioner newsletter of the MEPIELAN Centre, launched in 2010.ย  It features insight articles, reflective opinions, specially selected documents and cases, book reviews as well as news on thematic topics of direct interest of MEPIELAN Centre and on the activities and role of MEPIELAN Centre. Its content bridges theory and practice perspectives of relational international law, international environmental law and participatory governance , and international negotiating process, thus serving the primary goal of Centre: to develop an integrated, inter-disciplinary, relational, context-related and sustainably effective governance approach creating, protecting and advancing international common interest for the present and future generations. Providing a knowledge- and information-sharing platform and a scholarly forum, the Bulletin promotes innovative ideas and enlightened critical views, contributing to a broader scholarly debate on important issues of international common interest. The audience of the Bulletin includes academics, practitioners, researchers, university students, international lawyers, officials and personnel of international organizations and institutional arrangements, heads and personnel of national authorities at all levels (national, regional and local), and members of the civil society at large.

Climate Change

Sustainable Development Goals and Agenda 2030

Celebrating its 50th Anniversary, UNEP links its Strengthening with the implementation of the environmental dimension of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development

In the aftermath of the fifth United Nations Environmental Assembly, UNEP convened, on 3-4 March 2022, a special session called UNEP@50ย to commemorate the 50 years since the establishment of the United Nations Environmental Programme in 1972, in Stockholm.ย  Theย meetingย was held under the theme โ€œStrengthening UNEP for the implementation of the environmental dimension of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Developmentโ€, providing the opportunity for high-level officials, scientists, academia, and civil society to reflect on the organizationโ€™s five decades of engagement into environmental affairs. In this context,ย the meeting exploredย how to further strengthen UNEP in the entityโ€™sย endeavor to substantially implement the environmental dimension of the sustainable development, thus contributingย to the battle against the triple planetary crisis of climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution.

Read the full text

Environmental Governance Regimes

MEDITERRANEAN SEA โ€“ Outcomes of the 21st Meeting of the Contracting Parties to the Barcelona Convention and its Protocols

Fourteen thematic decisions related to pollution and marine litter, biodiversity and marine protected areas, blue economy and integrated coastal zone management alongside a groundbreaking roadmap for the proposal of a possible designation of the Mediterranean as an Emission Control Area for Sulphur Oxides, were adopted by the Contracting Parties to the Barcelona Convention and its Protocols during their 21st Meeting in Naples, Italy (COP21).

Read the full text

Articles

Articles

The EU Implementation of the Nagoya Protocol to the Biodiversity Convention: A Game Changer or Institutional Paralysis?

Unimproved germplasm, the way found in nature, and landraces cultivated by farmers around the world for years, were, till the adoption of the Biodiversity Convention, a free access resource. Improved germplasm, by breeding or bio-engineering, on the other hand, is often protected by patents or other sui generis intellectual property rights (IPRs). The power of the seed industry, the industry that has acquired IPRs over most of the improved germplasm, has increased dramatically. Five big companies, Syngenta (owned by ChemChina), Bayer (Germany), Corteva (US, a spinoff of DowDuPont) and BASF (Germany) control a sizeable piece of the total seed market and 90 percent of the agrochemical market. The oligopolistic nature of the seed industry makes improved germplasm often prohibitively expensive for the farmers of the developing countries.

Read the full text

Articles

The Negotiation on Mainstreaming a new Partnership Agreement between the EU and ACP countries into Sustainability Governance: Integrating Law and Policy

The European Union and the countries of the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States officially opened negotiations for the conclusion of a new Partnership Agreement in New York on 28 September 2018 in the margins of the UN General Assembly. The new agreement will enter into effect after 2020, following the expiry of the Cotonou Agreement on 29 February 2020. The Cotonou Agreement was adopted in June 2000, and entered into force in April 2003. To date, it is the most comprehensive and balanced partnership agreement between the EU and developing countries. It determines the legal regime and general governance framework applicable to EU relations with ACP countries on a wide range of policy issues focused on: the eradication of poverty, the promotion of sustainable development from an economic, social, environmental and cultural perspective, and the progressive integration of ACP countries into the global economic system.

Read the full text

Articles

Unilateralism in the treatment of the COVID-19 pandemic. A Biologistโ€™s Perspective

Humanity has waged long wars against many different, sometimes imaginary threats. In 1958, in the Republic of China, a relentless four-year war was waged against an animal species that would hardly be declared an enemy: the little sparrow. The real cause of this war was the miserable policy of the Party that threatened China with famine. The "enemy" was none other than the endemic arboreal sparrow: a small, cowardly bird that had the misfortune to be included in the" Four Pests Campaign" along with mosquitoes, flies, and rats, well-known carriers of dangerous pathogens. Mao's authority declared war because the "experts" defined the sparrow as a competitive species in grain farming.The leader's authority and the "excellence" of the party turned China's people into a ruthless killer of millions of small birds, which caused a severe ecological disaster and the great Chinese famine.

Read the full text

Articles

In Treaty we Negotiably Trust: Unearthing the Interrelationship between International Negotiation and Treaty in Constructing International Common Interest

There is a challenging and refreshing approach in my new book โ€œInternational Negotiation: A Process of Relational Governance for International Common Interestโ€ that maintained my spirit daringly devoted and my interest creatively alive throughout the years of its writing. I propose a relational theory that systematically unveils the interrelationship between International Negotiation and Treaty as a process of relational governance constructing International Common Interest (ICI), thus raising a fundamental theoretical claim and a practical platform for an interdisciplinary and more knowledgeable understanding and conduct of international negotiation.

Read the full text

Articles

Science-Policy Interfaces and Regional Environmental Governance: The Case of the Mediterranean

In the Mediterranean region, there are longstanding procedures and practices of dialogue and interaction between Science and Policy within robust institutional frameworks established for a better environmental governance and sustainable management of marine and coastal ecosystems, in particular within the UN Environment/Mediterranean Action Plan (MAP) โ€“ Barcelona Convention system. Being subject to an increasing number of cumulative pressures and threats associated with human activities that have significant impacts on marine and coastal ecosystems, the Mediterranean basin is both a showcase and a testing ground for environmental governance and for evidence-based policy-making at the regional level.

Read the full text

Articles

Going against the UNCLOS (in One Specific Instance)

There is no doubt that the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Montego Bay, 1982; UNCLOS) is a cornerstone in the process for the codification of international law. It was described as a โ€œconstitution for oceansโ€, โ€œa monumental achievement in the international communityโ€, โ€œthe first comprehensive treaty dealing with practically every aspect of the uses and resources of the seas and the oceansโ€, as well as an instrument that โ€œhas successfully accommodated the competing interests of all nationsโ€. However, there is at least one specific matter where the UNCLOS regime was seen as leading to very unsatisfactory results. A new instrument of universal scope was adopted to better address this matter.A new instrument of universal scope was adopted to better address this matter. It is the Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage (Paris, 2001; CPUCH).

Read the full text

Opinions

Opinions

The Benefits of Continuous Training and Education in International Environmental Negotiations: Reviewing two Practical Guides for Environmental Negotiators

Nowadays, international environmental negotiation has become one of the most substantial and widespread forms of international communication in the realm of international environmental governance and an invaluable tool for handling and offering mutually beneficial solutions to large-scale transboundary environmental problems.

Read the full text

Opinions

Reviewing Two Distant OECD Environmental Performance Reports for Greece: What Progress?

When the first OECD Environmental Performance Review of Greece was published in 1983, the great challenge for the Greek Government was to respond to the pressures on the natural resources and the environment resulting from the rapid economic growth, which started in the 1970s, and the consequent expansion of a number of potentially heavy polluting industries. Almost thirty years later, the latest OECD Review, the 2009 OECD Environmental Performance Review of Greece, proves that not only little has been done by the consecutive Greek Governments since then, but also, major warnings have been systematically ignored.

Read the full text

Documents & Cases

Documents & Cases

The World Congress Rio+20 Declaration on Justice, Governance and Law for Environmental Sustainability

The World Congress on Justice, Governance and Law for Environmental Sustainability was held in Brazil, from 17-20 June 2012, with the aim to contribute to the support of Chief Justices, Attorneys General, Auditors Generals and other legal experts to the achievement of sustainable development and to provide inputs to the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development Rio +20.

Read the full text

Documents & Cases

Nicaragua Files New Proceedings Against Costa Rica Before the International Court of Justice over Sovereignty Violations and Major Environmental Damages to its Territory

On 22 December 2011 the Republic of Nicaragua filed suit against the Republic of Costa Rica at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) alleging that Costa Ricaโ€™s plan for the construction of a road along the border area between the two countries violates its territorial integrity and has serious environmental consequences to the ecosystem.

Read the full text

Documents & Cases

โ€œDeep Water: The Gulf Oil Disaster and the Future of Offshore Drillingโ€ – Final Report of the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling

April 2010 marked a catastrophe of an unprecedented scale in the Gulf of Mexico that was undoubtedly a turning point for the future of offshore drilling not only in the United States, but worldwide. On April 20, the Macondo well that was situated 50 miles offshore Louisiana blew out causing the sinking of the semi-submersible Deepwater Horizon rig which resulted in injuring 17 and costing the lives of 11 workers and in having devastating environmental and broader economic impacts. On January 2011, the โ€œNational Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drillingโ€, appointed by President Obama on 22 May 2010, handed over its report after a six-month intense research period.

Read the full text

Documents & Cases

CoE/CEMAT Moscow Declaration on โ€œFuture Challenges: Sustainable Spatial Development of the European Continent in a Changing Worldโ€ July 9, 2010

The 15th Council of Europe Conference of Ministers Responsible for Spatial/Regional Planning (CoE/CEMAT) was held in Moscow (Russian Federation) on 8-9 July 2010 on the theme โ€œFuture Challenges: Sustainable Spatial Development of the European Continent in a Changing Worldโ€.

Read the full text

Books

Books

The Handbook of Global Climate and Environment Policy

The Handbook of Global Climate and Environment Policy presents an authoritative and comprehensive overview of global policy on climate and the environment. It combines the strengths of an interdisciplinary team of experts from around the world to explore current debates and the latest thinking in the search for global environmental solutions.

Read the full text

Books

Environmental Governance of the Great Seas โ€“ Law and Effect

The great seas contain immense resources and provide invaluable services to humankind, yet their environmental conditions are threatened worldwide. The authors of this comprehensive and interdisciplinary study provide a rich assessment of the seas and the efficacy of the international environmental regimes governing them, as well as suggestions for improving governance and protection.

Read the full text

Books

Global Environmental Governance Reconsidered

The notion of global governance is widely studied in academia and increasingly relevant to politics and policy making. Yet many of its fundamental elements remain unclear in both theory and practice. Yet many of its fundamental elements remain unclear in both theory and practice. This book offers a fresh perspective by analyzing global governance in terms of three major trends, as exemplified by developments in global sustainability governance.

Read the full text

Thematic News

Sustainable Development Goals and Agenda 2030

Celebrating its 50th Anniversary, UNEP links its Strengthening with the implementation of the environmental dimension of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development

In the aftermath of the fifth United Nations Environmental Assembly, UNEP convened, on 3-4 March 2022, a special session called UNEP@50ย to commemorate the 50 years since the establishment of the United Nations Environmental Programme in 1972, in Stockholm.ย  Theย meetingย was held under the theme โ€œStrengthening UNEP for the implementation of the environmental dimension of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Developmentโ€, providing the opportunity for high-level officials, scientists, academia, and civil society to reflect on the organizationโ€™s five decades of engagement into environmental affairs. In this context,ย the meeting exploredย how to further strengthen UNEP in the entityโ€™sย endeavor to substantially implement the environmental dimension of the sustainable development, thus contributingย to the battle against the triple planetary crisis of climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution.

Read the full text

Environmental Governance Regimes

MEDITERRANEAN SEA โ€“ Outcomes of the 21st Meeting of the Contracting Parties to the Barcelona Convention and its Protocols

Fourteen thematic decisions related to pollution and marine litter, biodiversity and marine protected areas, blue economy and integrated coastal zone management alongside a groundbreaking roadmap for the proposal of a possible designation of the Mediterranean as an Emission Control Area for Sulphur Oxides, were adopted by the Contracting Parties to the Barcelona Convention and its Protocols during their 21st Meeting in Naples, Italy (COP21).

Read the full text

Member News

No articles found

Obituaries

No articles found