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Archive | 2006

Land use law for sustainable development

Nathalie J. Chalifour; Patricia Kameri-Mbote; Lin Heng Lye; John R. Nolon

This volume, the proceedings of the IUCN Academy of Environmental Law 2004 Nairobi Colloquium, surveys global experience in implementing land use policies along the sustainable development continuum. Some chapters discuss the challenges of implementing sustainable land use policies in different regions, revealing problems common to all jurisdictions and highlighting other more unique obstacles to sustainability. Other contributions address new approaches to sustainable land use, such as reforms to property rights regimes and environmental law. Comparative approaches enrich the analysis.


Archive | 2010

Sustainability matters : environmental management in Asia

Lin Heng Lye; George Ofori; Lai Choo Malone-Lee; Victor R. Savage; Yen-Peng Ting

Corporate Environmental Governance and Financial Performance Relationship (S V Valentine & V Savage) Implementation of ISO 14001 Environmental Management System in Vietnam (D M Anh & G Ofori) Policies and Legal Frameworks of Protected Area Management in Nepal (B L Dutt et al.) Study of Parks and Nature Reserves Fiscal Management Models (C Ng & M L C Lee) Marine Invasive Dpecies and their Potential Impacts on Singapore Waters (M K Puthia et al.) Aquaculture Management in Thua Thien Hue Province, Vietnam: Environmental Considerations (T T M Hang & L M Chou) Cost Benefit Analysis of Mining in Protected Forest: A Case Study in Indonesia (S Irawan & Y-H Chang) A Green Energy Policy and New Electricity Market of Singapore (A H F Ong & Y-H Chang) Hazardous Waste Management for Ho Chih Minh City (D T Trang & Y P Ting) Management of Electronic Waste in Singapore (Y S Chan & Y P Ting) and other papers.


Archive | 2016

Introduction: exploring environmental law in Southeast Asia

Kheng-Lian Koh; Nicholas Robinson; Lin Heng Lye

The environmental performance of most ASEAN Member States, as assessed by reputable studies, is above the world average, and the ecological footprint is much lower than that of many nations. However, ASEAN will continue to face growing environmental challenges given the need to lift a third of its population earning less than


Archive | 2016

ASEAN and environmental sustainability

Kheng-Lian Koh; Nicholas Robinson; Lin Heng Lye

2 a day out of poverty, and the many other pressures exerted on the environment such as population growth, urbanization and industrialization. Dr. Surin Pitsuwan, ASEAN Secretary-General Environment is sans frontieres. Many of the current or emerging environmental problems are transnational and transboundary, necessitating legal integration, whether in the form of hard or soft laws, programs, policies or governance innnovations, such as ASEAN Dialogue Partners, or the United Nations Environment Programme consultations. All these are crucial to ASEAN. ASEAN is part of the global order for environmental sustainability. It is a partner of the United Nations in the field of development. As the 1971 Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment and the 1992 “Earth Summit” at Rio De Janiero have made clear, we the peoples of the United Nations and of ASEAN alike, share one world, one atmosphere, one stratosphere. ASEANs economic pillar requires integration to move Southeast Asia forward, and environment must move in tandem to prevent degradation of ecosystems for development to be sustainable regionally and globally. This monograph examines the phenomenon of “integration through law” (ITL), or more particularly how the member states of ASEAN employ law as a means of regional integration, focusing in particular on how this process functions in the context of environmental conservation and sustainable development. The several chapters trace ASEANs struggles to integrate environment within its own community and also with the global community. There are many concerns, not only in terms of the lack of institutional capacity and funding, but in the very nature of environmental problems. The environmental sciences have taught nations how complicated and interrelated human impacts are on the climate or ecosystems. States are left grappling with solutions. The search for environmentally sustainable progress is an ongoing, adaptive process, often without clear, immediate answers. This complexity is compounded by too many inputs that national sectors receive from diverse interdisciplinary studies, without any governance system to connect them.


Archive | 2016

Founding of ASEAN – a short history

Kheng-Lian Koh; Nicholas Robinson; Lin Heng Lye

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) aspires to be a neighborhood where richly diverse nations can attain common purposes by cooperating together in consensual and graduated steps. It proposes and posits “One Vision, One Identity, and One Caring and Sharing Community” as the uniting common ground. Composed of ten sovereign states, ASEAN has at its core an international legal framework, through which it shapes its steps toward a shared vision. The goal of sustainable development, as articulated through the UN Conference on Environment and Development, is a central vision shared by each ASEAN member state. ASEAN cooperation on common policies and laws for the environment and development emerged through agreeing on topics of common concern, preparing draft programs that include capacity-building measures to ensure that each member state is ready to collaborate further, followed by the preparation of draft “soft law” policy declarations vetted through the appropriate governmental levels (civil service, ministers or heads of state). The soft law provides the basis for adopting congruent national laws and regulations to further a common ASEAN approach. In the environmental arena, this is well illustrated by the ASEAN biodiversity programs and the system of protected natural heritage areas. The ASEAN Way builds confidence and avoids conflict among the member states. These goals are fundamental. War in Indochina raged through much of the twentieth century. As Principles 25 and 26 of the 1992 Rio Declaration on Environment and Development proclaim, “Warfare is inherently destructive of sustainable development. States shall therefore respect international law providing protection for the environment in times of armed conflict and cooperate in its further development, as necessary … Peace, development and environmental protection are interdependent and indivisible.” ASEAN member states have identified cooperation in the field of environmental protection to be a common priority. Each has acknowledged the objective of sustainable development, as formulated by Agenda 21. Each is at a different point along the pathway to making development sustainable. ASEAN perspectives on environmental sustainability cannot be separated from the history of each member state. Except for Thailand, each was colonized by states from outside the region. This left a legacy of civil law (with the Dutch, French or Spanish variants) and common law (with the British or American variants) and a legacy of Islamic legal principles and more recently socialist law principles, in the various states comprising ASEAN.


Archive | 2016

The environment in the ASEAN region

Kheng-Lian Koh; Nicholas Robinson; Lin Heng Lye

From the ASEAN web page: www.asean.org/asean/about-asean/history On August 8, 1967, five leaders – the Foreign Ministers of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand – sat down together in the main hall of the Department of Foreign Affairs building in Bangkok, Thailand and signed a document. By virtue of that document, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) was born. The five Foreign Mini sters who signed it – Adam Malik of Indonesia, Narciso R. Ramos of the Philippines, Tun Abdul Razak of Malaysia, S. Rajaratnam of Singapore and Thanat Khoman of Thailand – would subsequently be hailed as the Founding Fathers of probably the most successful intergovernmental organization in the developing world today. And the document that they signed would be known as the ASEAN Declaration. It was a short, simply-worded document containing just five articles. It declared the establishment of an Association for Regional Cooperation among the Countries of Southeast Asia to be known as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and spelled out the aims and purposes of that Association. These aims and purposes were about cooperation in the economic, social, cultural, technical, educational and other fields, and in the promotion of regional peace and stability through abiding respect for justice and the rule of law and adherence to the principles of the United Nations Charter. It stipulated that the Association would be open for participation by all States in the Southeast Asian region subscribing to its aims, principles and purposes. It proclaimed ASEAN as representing “the collective will of the nations of Southeast Asia to bind themselves together in friendship and cooperation and, through joint efforts and sacrifices, secure for their peoples and for posterity the blessings of peace, freedom and prosperity.” It was while Thailand was brokering reconciliation among Indonesia, the Philippines and Malaysia over certain disputes that it dawned on the four countries that the moment for regional cooperation had come or the future of the region would remain uncertain. Recalls one of the two surviving protagonists of that historic process, Thanat Khoman of Thailand: “At the banquet marking the reconciliation between the three disputants, I broached the idea of forming another organization for regional cooperation with Adam Malik. Malik agreed without hesitation but asked for time to talk with his government and also to normalize relations with Malaysia now that the confrontation was over.


Archive | 2016

ASEAN Environmental Legal Integration: ASEAN collaboration towards environmental sustainability

Kheng-Lian Koh; Nicholas Robinson; Lin Heng Lye

Evergreen tropical forests, mountain forests, monsoon forests, limestone and karst formations, wetlands, marine and coastal waters – these are among the major habitats or ecosystems found in Southeast Asia that store the worlds largest collection of plant and animal life. These are life-giving resources for over half a billion people of the region and millions more around the world. Dr. Surin Pitsuwan, ASEAN Secretary-General 3.1 Evaluating bio-geographic trends in the ASEAN region Members of ASEAN share a common appreciation of nature in their customs, religious beliefs and social values. They also share the experiences of rapid urbanization and growing national populations. From 450 million in 1990, more than 622 million people live in ASEANs ten countries in 2012, soon to be an estimated 650 million by 2020. Human population growth is most rapid in Indonesia (40 percent), the Philippines (17 percent) and Vietnam (16 percent), and the demands on environmental resources grow commensurately. All people among member states rely on the environment for their livelihoods, whether directly or indirectly. Despite disparities in levels of socio-economic development, with gross domestic product per person ranging from US


Archive | 2016

Integrating sustainability into ASEAN state practice

Kheng-Lian Koh; Nicholas Robinson; Lin Heng Lye

59,937 to US


Archive | 2015

Sustainability Matters: Environmental and Climate Changes in the Asia-Pacific

Lin Heng Lye; Victor R. Savage; Harn-Wei Kua; Loke-Ming Chou; Puay Yok Tan

1,327, member states collaborate to identify what is needed for environmental protection and the attainment of sustainable development. They cooperate through five-year planning cycles to build their capacity to provide environmental protection as a pillar for socio-economic development. Member states have made significant gains in building their capacity to be stewards of nature and natural resources, and to implement regionally their national obligations under multilateral environmental agreements and other environmental treaties. Nonetheless, as ASEANs Secretary-General acknowledges: The environmental performance of most ASEAN Member States, as assessed by reputable studies, is above the world average, and the ecological footprint is much lower than that of many nations. However, ASEAN will continue to face growing environmental challenges given the need to lift a third of its population earning less than


International Journal of Rural Law and Policy | 2013

Summary proceedings: Workshop on REDD+ and legal regimes of mangroves, peatlands and other wetlands: ASEAN and the world

Lovleen Bhullar; Kheng Lian Koh; Lin Heng Lye

2 a day out of poverty, and the many other pressures exerted on the environment such as population growth, urbanization and industrialization. Law provides both a significant foundation and an effective procedure for ASEAN member states as they pursue intergovernmental environmental cooperation. The ASEAN Way encourages the sharing of goals and agreement by consensus on a phased pacing of capacity building for environmental stewardship, as discussed in Chapter 5 of this study.

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Kheng-Lian Koh

National University of Singapore

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Victor R. Savage

National University of Singapore

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Burton Ong

National University of Singapore

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Joseph Chun

National University of Singapore

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Puay Yok Tan

National University of Singapore

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Jolene Lin

University of Hong Kong

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Harvey Neo

National University of Singapore

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