Preface
List of Figures and Tables
List of Acronyms
1. An Unfinished Foundation: The Global Environment and the Four
Pillars of the UN System
2. Law among Nations, Development within Them: Origins and Growth
of the UN's Environmental Framework
3. The Limits of Law and Development and the Case for Peace and
Rights
4. The Dignity and Worth of People in Nature: Strengthening
Environmental Human Rights
5. Greening the Response to the Scourge of War: Environment,
Resources, Conflict and Peace
6. A Stronger Foundation for Global Environmental Governance
Notes
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Ken Conca is Professor of International Relations in the School of International Service at American University.
"A careful reconstruction of how environment has been framed in UN
deliberations."
--Geopolitics
"The work's novelty resides in the unique balance that it manages
to strike in calling for change without discrediting the
international organization responsible for effecting that very
change. A commendable job."
--Columbia University Journal of Politics & Society
"...an intriguing, innovative analysisof the problematic nature of
the UN's currentfocus on development and international legal
structures as pillars of its environmental policy, and the need to
expand the grounding of that policy to include human rights and
conflict resolution considerations. [A] well-reasoned, extesnively
documented argument."
--American Library Association
"Reading An Unfinished Foundation convinced me that Conca has a
credible case to make. He writes clearly, accessibly, and
engagingly, carefully marshaling argument and evidence. His
argument is a measured one--that the reforms he is proposing will
improve environmental governance, not that they will fix it.
Furthermore, he makes it in a way that addresses the weaknesses as
well as the strengths of the UN system."
--lH-Diplo
"Conca provides an intriguing, innovative analysis of the
problematic nature of the UN's current focus on development and
international legal structures as pillars of its environmental
policy, and the need to expand the grounding of that policy to
include human rights and conflict resolution considerations. His
well-reasoned, extensively documented argument highlights
significant weaknesses of current, more-reactive environmental
initiatives to address
underlying causes of environmental degradation, bring about
meaningful change, and address the environmental needs of all
sectors of humanity."
--CHOICE
"This book is the first to connect the evolution of global
environmental governance
to the mission of the United Nations in its entirety and to explain
the
history, interconnections, and significance of the UN's work across
its mandate
to the global environmental and sustainability agenda. Moreover,
the book does
so seamlessly, effortlessly, and compellingly." -Maria Ivanova,
University of Massachusetts Boston
"...reading An Unfinished Foundation convinced me that Conca has a
credible case to make. He writes clearly, accessibly, and
engagingly, carefully marshaling argument abd evidence." -J. Samuel
Barkin, University of Massachusetts Boston
"Conca leads us through the journey of how the UN has developed,
specifically how the environmental aspect has evolved, and what
opportunities exist for promoting better global environmental
governance within it."-Hannah Keren Lee, Environment &
Urbaniziied'
"Conca focuses on the present without ignoring the past; in fact,
he argues in favor of the integration of rights-based policies
combining envrionemntal sustainability with peacbuilding."-Iris
Aikaterini Frangou, Columbia University Journal of Politics &
Society'
"This book examines the origins, effectiveness, and limitations of
the United Nations system's approach to global environmental
governance."-Academic Council On The United Nations System
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