Book by IISD’s Earth Negotiations Bulletin
WINNIPEG—March 6, 2012—An insider’s view of how
environmental diplomacy operates is revealed in a new book
reviewing the accomplishments and shortcomings for
sustainable development since the 1992 United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development—the first Rio
Earth Summit.
The book is written by the International
Institute for Sustainable Development’s Earth
Negotiations Bulletin team, and edited by ENB
executive editor Pam Chasek, and Lynn Wagner, managing editor of
knowledge management projects for IISD Reporting Services.
It reviews the 20-year period since world leaders first
gathered to construct a new sustainable development paradigm
that promised to enhance environmentally sound economic and
social development.
“This book captures the dynamics of international sustainable development through the eyes of the experts who have been right there with a ringside seat at negotiations, offering us a rare and valuable insight as we move forward beyond discussions to implementation,” said IISD board chair Dan Gagnier.
The Roads from Rio: Lessons Learned from Twenty Years of Multilateral Environmental Negotiation (paperback, US$39.95; published by Resources for the Future Press/Routledge) offers first-hand insights by writers who have participated in most of the post-1992 negotiating processes.
“This is how international environmental diplomacy really operates. The authors apply a fine-grained level of resolution that offers new insights into the practice of international environmental politics by multiple actor groups,” said Peter M. Haas, professor of political science at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
The chapters
examine the proliferation of multilateral environmental
negotiations and meetings, changes in the actors and their
roles (governments, nongovernmental organizations,
secretariats), the interlinkages of issues, the impact of
scientific advice and the challenges of implementation
across UN negotiating processes, including the Framework
Convention on Climate Change, the Convention to Combat
Desertification, the Convention on Biological Diversity, the
Commission on Sustainable Development, the Forum on Forests,
the chemicals conventions (Stockholm, Basel and Rotterdam),
the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone
Layer, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species, the Convention on Migratory Species and the
International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and
Agriculture.
The book is available at Routledge.com or on Amazon.com.
ENDS