Fireside Chat: Celebrating the book launch of Governing Climate Change: Global Cities and Transnational Lawmaking

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  • Fireside Chat: Celebrating the book launch of Governing Climate Change: Global Cities and Transnational Lawmaking
January

24

Thursday
Speaker:Associate Professor Jolene Lin, National University of Singapore
Professor Tommy Koh, Ambassador-at-Large, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Singapore
Venue:Block B Staff Lounge  Block B Level 2, NUS Law (Bukit Timah Campus) 
Type of Participation:Open To Public

Description

The Asia-Pacific Centre for Environmental Law (APCEL) organised a book launch on 24 January 2019 at NUS Law to celebrate the publication of Governing Climate Change: Global Cities and Transnational Lawmaking by Associate Professor Jolene Lin (Director, APCEL).

Billed as a fireside chat, the event featured author Associate Professor Jolene Lin and Professor Tommy Koh ’61 (Ambassador-at-Large (Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Singapore and Chair, APCEL) in a lively discussion about the claim that cities are making and implementing international law in the realm of climate change governance.

The Book

Cities are no longer just places to live in. They are significant actors on the global stage, and nowhere is this trend more prominent than in the world of transnational climate change governance (TCCG). Through transnational networks that form links between cities, states, international organisations, corporations, and civil society, cities are developing and implementing norms, practices, and voluntary standards across national boundaries. In introducing cities as transnational lawmakers, Jolene Lin provides an exciting new perspective on climate change law and policy, offering novel insights about the reconfiguration of the state and the nature of international lawmaking as the involvement of cities in TCCG blurs the public/private divide and the traditional strictures of ‘domestic’ versus ‘international’. This illuminating book should be read by anyone interested in understanding how cities – in many cases, more than the countries in which they are located – are addressing the causes and consequences of climate change.

More information about this book is available at Cambridge University Press

Organised By

Asia-Pacific Centre for Environmental Law

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