Executive Environmental Law |
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Authors: | Elizabeth Fisher |
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Affiliation: | Professor of Environmental Law, Faculty of Law, University of Oxford. I would like to thank Roderick Bagshaw, Sanja Bogojević, Mark Freedland, Ben Pontin, Eloise Scotford and two anonymous reviewers for comments on a previous draft. Any errors or omissions remain my own. |
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Abstract: | The Draft Environment (Principles and Governance) Bill published by DEFRA in late 2018 is part of a process of reimagining environmental law in light of Brexit. The Draft Bill creates frameworks for policy statements on environmental principles and environmental implementation plans, as well as creating a new enforcement body – the Office for Environmental Protection. This Draft Bill is, at the very least, an ineffectual response to the challenges of environmental law post-Brexit. More alarmingly, it raises the possibility of a legal future in which the executive dominates how the norms, ambitions, and accountabilities of environmental law are defined. These are matters of concern for environmental and public lawyers alike. |
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