|
|
Course Details |
Fees and Dates
LAWS8145 is only available under certain award programs.
| Offered By: |
Law |
| Academic Career: |
Graduate Coursework |
| Course Subject: |
Laws |
| Offered in: |
LAWS8145 will not be offered in 2010 |
| Unit Value: |
6 units |
| Course Description: |
Objectives: On completion of this course it is expected that students will be able to: - explain, identify and critique environmental regulatory regimes dealing with science, risk, risk assessment and environmental impact assessment
- critically analyse the literature on ‘regulatory science' and other forms of science provided in environmental regulatory regimes.
- understand and explain theoretical perspectives on the role and importance of science and scientific uncertainty (as compared to other factors) in decision-making within these regimes,
- understand, critique and apply the relevant law on the precautionary principle and related concepts within administrative law
- research scientific, socio-legal and legal databases to obtain literature relevant to environmental regulation
- present the findings of research as a well-reasoned paper in written (and possibly also oral) form.
Content: Selected topics include: - Theories of environmental decision-making including the use of expert science in decision-making
- Political, administrative and institutional contexts
- Models of environmental regulatory regimes based on scientific information and the assessment of risk
(For example, environmental impact assessment, gene technology, hazardous chemicals, fisheries management regimes, forestry, endangered species). - Sources of scientific uncertainty and standards of ‘regulatory science'
- Theory, method and law of risk assessment
- Legislative standards of preventive and precautionary regulation
- Case law on standards of science
- The precautionary principle in international law and in international trade disputes
- Interpreting and implementing the precautionary principle in domestic law (threshold test and precautionary action)
- Scientific uncertainty, the precautionary principle, and the threshold test
- Legal and institutional reform.
|
| Indicative Assessment: |
Students must rely on the Approved Assessment which will be posted to the course homepage on the ANU Law website, prior to the commencement of the course. |
| Workload: |
26 Contact Hours (Intensive Delivery)
|
| Course Classification(s): |
and |
| Areas of Interest: |
Law |
| Requisite Statement: |
LAWS8189 Fundamentals of Environmental Law (non-lawyers) |
| Incompatibility: |
Students who have completed LAWS8279 Environmental Impact Assessment Law will need to seek permission from the lecturer to enrol in this course. |
| Majors/Specialisations: |
Environmental Law and Environmental Law |
| Programs: |
Graduate Diploma in Environmental Law, Graduate Certificate in Environmental Law, Master of Legal Studies, and Master of Environmental Law |
| Other Information: |
This course has been renamed from Science in Environmental Regulation. |
| Academic Contact: |
Judy Jones and Graduate Administration |
|