CCLR - Carbon & Climate Law Review
The Carbon & Climate Law Review brings together representatives from the legal discipline for the first time in one specialised journal, allowing them to engage in a dynamic debate on the law of climate change. Responding to the growing demand for a discussion forum on these issues, the Carbon & Climate Law Review strikes a balance between the interests of practitioners, notably those engaged in the rapidly evolving carbon market, and a more doctrinal focus, alternating legal policy recommendations with timely articles on legal aspects of carbon trading and other dimensions of greenhouse gas regulation. A section on current developments updates readers on recent market trends, political decisions, new literature and relevant events. CCLR in 2009 CCLR 1/2009: Reforming the CDM: Institutions and Governance CCLR 2/2009: Carbon Finance and Investment CCLR 3/2009: Moving Towards Copenhagen: Legal and Normative Challenges CCLR 4/2009: Climate Change and the Law of the Sea
- Print ISSN:
- 1864-9904
- Frequency:
- Quarterly
- Launch:
- 2007
About CCLR
As climate policies evolve around the globe, attention is shifting from their conceptual design to the challenges of implementation. Where theoretical concerns once dominated, legal professionals are now called upon to ensure smooth operation of the regulatory framework. No area reflects this better than the carbon market, where each transaction is subject to sophisticated contractual arrangements, liability rules, accounting practices, and other mandatory constraints.
Responding to the growing demand for a discussion forum on these issues, the Carbon & Climate Law Review strikes a balance between the interests of practitioners, notably those engaged in the rapidly evolving carbon market, and a more doctrinal focus, alternating legal policy recommendations with timely articles on legal aspects of carbon trading and other dimensions of greenhouse gas regulation.
A section on current developments updates readers on recent market trends, political decisions, new literature and relevant events. Most importantly, however, the Carbon & Climate Law Review brings together representatives from the legal discipline and other stakeholders in one specialised journal, allowing them to engage in a dynamic debate on the law of climate change.
Editor
Michael Mehling
Associate Editors
Harro van Asselt, Camilla Bausch, Kyle W. Danish, Leonardo Massai, Amy Merrill, Francesco Sindico, Karl Upston-Hooper
Editorial Board
Geert van Calster, Elisabeth DeMarco, David Driesen, Astrid Epiney, David Freestone, Michael Gerrard, Anthony Hobley, Richard Macrory, Simon Marr, Annie Petsonk, Michael Rodi, Wolf-Friedrich Spieth, Charlotte Streck, William L. Thomas, Martijn Wilder
Peer Review
The general articles featured in each issue are unsolicited submissions and are peer-reviewed by at least one and typically two reviewers. For the thematic focus, however, a guest editor takes responsibility for identifying suitable topics and authors, and also for ensuring the quality of the submissions.
Subscription
Publication frequency: quarterly
(Postage and handling are included)
approx. 60 pages
ISSN 18 64-99 04
Printed Version Only *: € 360,- (excl. VAT) / € 385,20 (incl. VAT)
(Postage and handling are included)
Online Edition Only *: € 360,- (excl. VAT) / € 428,40 (incl. VAT)
(Postage and handling are included)
Printed Version + Online Edition *: € 392,- (excl. VAT) / € 442,96 (incl. VAT)
(Postage and handling are included)
Online Edition Only - Campus Licence **: € 720,- (excl. VAT) / € 856,80 (incl. VAT)
(Postage and handling are included)
Printed Version + Online Edition - Campus Licence **: € 752,- (excl. VAT) / € 871,36 (incl. VAT)
(Postage and handling are included)
Single Issue: € 104,- (excl. VAT) / € 111,28 (incl. VAT)
(Postage and handling are included)
Customer comments
No comments were found for CCLR - Carbon & Climate Law Review. Be the first to comment!