Public Interest Environmental Litigation in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh (Comparative Environmental Law and Policy Series, Volume 7) FROM THE PUBLISHER
This research examines the growth and expansion of public interest environmental litigation (PIEL) in India and analyses the changes that are influencing the development of PIEL in Bangladesh and Pakistan. The necessity for this research lies in the rapid degradation of environment and the need of efficient environmental management in the three countries of the South Asian region. Here, we compare the legal systems of the three countries from the environmental point of view, discuss new ideas and directions and critically analyse the legal provisions that would help to apply environmental norms. These offer the legislators a chance to find out what can be applied in their own region, thus developing their existing legal mechanisms.
About the author
Jona Razzaque is barrister and holds a PhD in law from the University of London. She works in the field of access to environmental justice and has published numerous articles on this issue. She taught law in Queen Mary College and School of Oriental and African Studies under the University of London. She is currently working as a lawyer in the Foundation for International Environmental Law and Development (FIELD) on cross-themed projects related to bio-diversity, trade and climate change.
SYNOPSIS
In response to the rapid degradation of the environment and the need for efficient environmental management in the three South Asian countries, Razzaque examines the growth and expansion of public interest environmental litigation in India and analyzes the changes that are influencing its development in Bangladesh and Pakistan. She examines the existing rights and remedies available for environmental protection in the legal systems of the three countries to determine whether such litigation can be developed there and if so whether it should be developed as a tool to protect the environment. Her basic premise is that Indian law, through its developed regulatory mechanisms, accommodates effective environmental protection, but in Bangladesh and Pakistan, neither legislation nor the judiciary is making much headway. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR