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Dive into the research topics where Margaret A. Young is active.

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Featured researches published by Margaret A. Young.


World Trade Review | 2009

Fragmentation or Interaction: The WTO, Fisheries Subsidies and International Law

Margaret A. Young

© 2009 Margaret A. Young. Online edition of the journal is available at http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=WTR


Archive | 2017

The Impact of Climate Change Mitigation on Indigenous and Forest Communities: International, National and Local Law Perspectives on REDD+

Maureen Tehan; Lee Godden; Margaret A. Young; Kirsty Gover

The Impact of Climate Change Mitigation on Indigenous and Forest Communities is a rich and much-needed new contribution to contemporary understanding of this topic.


Archive | 2016

Trade Measures to Address Climate Change: Territory and Extraterritoriality

Margaret A. Young

States can reduce global greenhouse gas emissions through trade measures such as energy subsidies, labelling or certification requirements or tax adjustments. These measures modify production or consumption behaviour without regard to territorial borders. Yet territory is a significant concept for international efforts at climate change mitigation: the UNFCCC Paris Agreement, for example, relies on nationally determined contributions in the context of common but differentiated responsibilities. Moreover, public international law doctrine on extraterritorial jurisdiction may be said to require a ‘territorial nexus’ between the object of the trade measure and the state imposing the measure. Should the state concentrate on activities within its borders rather than shifting the burden of climate change mitigation to other countries through trade measures? The issue of historical responsibilities for climate change becomes even more fraught if the adverse effects of trade measures are felt disproportionately by indigenous peoples and other marginalised communities within states. This chapter reviews trade law and other jurisprudence and argues that trade measures addressing climate change are unlikely to enliven — let alone violate — public international law rules on extraterritorial jurisdiction. In the alternative, it argues that if a nexus is required, it is relatively easy to satisfy. Neither of these findings, however, dispose of the issue of the lack of parity between and within states with respect to historic contributions to the cause of climate change and vulnerabilities to its impacts. This chapter thus demonstrates the importance of an understanding of how territory — and jurisdiction — operate in the context of trade measures to address climate change, and how this understanding points to a need to be aware of the status and conditions of people within the territory of affected trading partners.


Archive | 2011

Trading fish, saving fish : the interaction between regimes in international law

Margaret A. Young


Archive | 2011

Regime interaction in international law : facing fragmentation

Margaret A. Young


Marine Policy | 2016

International trade law compatibility of market-related measures to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing

Margaret A. Young


Melbourne Journal of International Law | 2011

Protecting Endangered Marine Species: Collaboration between the Food and Agriculture Organization and the Cites Regime

Margaret A. Young


International Environmental Agreements-politics Law and Economics | 2017

Energy transitions and trade law: lessons from the reform of fisheries subsidies

Margaret A. Young


Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law | 2014

Trade Measures to Address Environmental Concerns in Faraway Places: Jurisdictional Issues

Margaret A. Young


Melbourne Journal of International Law | 2015

Evolution through the Duty to Cooperate: Implications of the Whaling Case at the International Court of Justice

Margaret A. Young; Sebastian Rioseco Sullivan

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Kirsty Gover

University of Melbourne

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Lee Godden

University of Melbourne

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