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E-grāmata: 'Earth Summit' Agreements: A Guide and Assessment: An Analysis of the Rio '92 UN Conference on Environment and Development [Taylor & Francis e-book]

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First published in 1993. The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in Rio de Janeiro, in June 1992, was a unique event in the annals of international affairs. The ‘Earth Summit’ brought more heads of state and government together than any previous meeting, and five separate agreements were signed by most of the participating governments. It was billed as the world’s greatest opportunity to resolve pressing problems of continuing poverty and environmental destruction and to set the world on a path of sustainable development. Thirty thousand people descended upon the city, and the Summit received a blaze of publicity around the world.

Yet despite the vast efforts devoted to it, and the unprecedented press coverage which it received, to many the Earth Summit is still a mystery. The outcome has been labelled as everything from a disastrous fiasco to an outstanding success. Which was it; indeed, what was it? What came out of it? What was actually agreed, and what does it mean for the future of environment and development issues?

This book presents a major summary and analysis of UNCED. It explains the background to the conference, its major achievements and disappointments, and the legacy which it has left. Individual chapters examine in detail each of the five main agreements signed at Rio, providing a short description of the negotiating background, analysis of the final text, and the likely implications. This title will be of great interest to students of environmental studies.

Preface vii
About the authors ix
Abbreviations xi
Summary and Conclusions xi
PART I OVERVIEW
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(2)
Chapter 2 The Road to Rio
3(10)
2.1 Introduction
3(1)
2.2 The Stockholm Conference
4(2)
2.3 From Stockholm to the Brundtland Commission
6(1)
2.4 The UNCED negotiations
7(2)
2.5 The broader process
9(4)
Chapter 3 The UNCED Outcome
13(10)
3.1 Introduction
13(1)
3.2 The Conventions
13(3)
3.3 Non-treaty agreements
16(2)
3.4 The UN aftermath
18(5)
Chapter 4 Themes and Lessons
23(26)
4.1 A process towards a process
23(3)
4.2 The North-South divide: economics and finance
26(4)
4.3 The North-South divide: population and consumption
30(3)
4.4 National interests and the diversity of nations
33(1)
4.5 Sovereignty and governance
34(3)
4.6 Regulatory policy, business, and the environment
37(3)
4.7 International institutions
40(4)
4.8 The role of non-governmental groups
44(2)
4.9 The politics of publicity and pressure
46(3)
Chapter 5 The Road from Rio
49(12)
5.1 Introduction
49(1)
5.2 Convention processes
49(3)
5.3 The broader agenda
52(3)
5.4 Tensions and prospects
55(6)
PART II THE UNCED AGREEMENTS
Chapter 6 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
61(14)
6.1 Origins and objectives
61(1)
6.2 The Convention
62(8)
6.3 Discussion and prospects
70(5)
Chapter 7 The United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity
75(10)
7.1 Historical beginnings
75(1)
7.2 The Convention
76(6)
7.3 Limitations, controversies, and prospects
82(3)
Chapter 8 The Rio Declaration on Environment and Development
85(12)
8.1 The negotiating background
85(5)
8.2 A commentary on the final Rio Declaration
90(4)
8.3 Discussion
94(3)
Chapter 9 Agenda 21
97(62)
9.1 The nature of Agenda 21
97(6)
9.2 Section 1: Social and economic dimensions
103(11)
9.3 Section II: Conservation and management of resources for development
114(22)
9.4 Section III: Strengthening the role of major groups
136(6)
9.5 Section IV: Means of implementation
142(11)
9.6 Agenda 21: Central themes and implementation
153(6)
Chapter 10 Forest Principles
159(10)
10.1 Origins of the Forest Principles
159(2)
10.2 Analysis of the text
161(3)
10.3 Implications and prospects
164(2)
10.4 Conclusions
166(3)
Appendix 1 Financial estimates, pledges and likely resources 169(10)
Appendix 2 Sources of further information 179
Michael Grubb, Matthias Koch, Koy Thomson, Francis Sullivan, Abby Munsin