This article begins by questioning the capacity of the concept of sustainable development to stabilize social reproduction and foster global justice. Based on interdisciplinary perspectives on global governance, it discusses the way in which global law fails to cope with the resonance of advanced capitalism in the world society and ecological systems. Our analysis focuses on the regulatory and institutional features of three interwoven functional regulatory regimes (global finance, energy, and environmental protection), which demonstrate structural governance dysfunction at the expense of ecological integrity and justice in the global realm. The article further examines the capacity of global law to foster a ‘compositive’ and ‘compensatory’ contribution to global justice and the stability of the Earth system through global constitutionalism. In this context, it concludes that Neil Walker's global law approach provides a fertile analytical framework for describing the patterns of interaction between different species of global law but proves to be particularly ‘slippery’ in its normative propositions regarding the gap between global law and justice. Drawing from the Earth system approach, we argue in favour of a global material constitutionalism, recognizant of ecosystemic boundaries and socio-environmental impacts of the global socio-economic metabolism. We consider that the gap between global law and global justice is best addressed by devising more deliberative patterns of transnational governance, as well as ecosystem and human rights approaches, in order to accommodate the fair and equitable internalization of material limits across global regulatory regimes that act as functionally differentiated economic constitutions of advanced capitalism.
La arquitectura administrativa de la transparencia en España: regulation-inside-government y diseño institucional de las Autoridades de TransparenciaThe administrative architecture of transparency in Spain: Regulationinside-government and institutional design of Transparency Authorities ENDRIUS COCCIOLO I, *
I am honoured to make my debut in this issue as associate editor of jeepl. Notwithstanding this satisfaction, I have to say that I am taking on this task in a particularly difficult season from an environmental perspective and most significantly for Europe. Indeed, the UN Secretary General has once again recalled that the indicators point incontrovertibly to a situation of climate chaos, the roots of which lie in the energy model based on fossil fuels whereas the dramatically tangible effects of the climate emergency are violent storms, droughts, and unliveable temperatures in large areas of the planet.1 Last May Europe was hit by an extraordinarily intense heat wave. The same has happened in Pakistan and India, as well as in Texas. These phenomena worsened in June and led to devastating fires. In Spain, so far this year, more than 25,000 hectares have already been destroyed by fire (many of these were forest stands), with a significant increase in the number of fires compared to the previous year and the average for the decade. A recent study has highlighted the direct interaction between climate change and fire regimes: "The reported trends indicate that global warming is possibly inducing an incipient change on regional fire dynamics towards increased fire impacts in Europe, suggesting that emerging risks posed by exceptional fire-weather danger conditions may progressively exceed current wildfire suppression capabilities in the next decades and 1 Guterres, A. "The world is burning. We need a renewables revolution". Action 2030 Blog.UN Sustainable Development Group, 30 June 2022. https://unsdg.un.org/latest/blog/ world-burning-we-need-renewables-revolution.
La transformación de las estructuras políticas y jurídicas que plantea la nueva estrategia europea para la Unión de la Energía está relacionada con las dinámicas de constitucionalización que emergen en el fragmentado panorama de los regímenes de gobernanza del capitalismo global. El estudio analiza si la estrategia desarrolla un nuevo paradigma constitucional o si persiste en un modelo de constitución económica material cuyo objetivo esencial es la construcción de un espacio homogéneo para asegurar el libre flujo energético. Sin embargo, las cuestiones constitucionales de la energía, del medio ambiente o de la economía, vistas a través de las lentes del antropoceno, brindan una nueva comprensión de las relaciones entre naturaleza y sociedad, y, por ende, un cambio hacia una nueva gubernamentalidad y la reconsideración de la visión del espacio sociopolítico y jurídico de la modernidad. El nuevo constitucionalismo ecosistémico establece límites a los poderes privados del capitalismo avanzado y articula las garantías institucionales contra las amenazas de las matrices anónimas a los sistemas planetarios.
LOS AYUNTAMIENTOS EN ESPAÑA. 4.1. La disolución de los Ayuntamientos y el principio de autonomía local. 4.2. El Reglamento de organización y funcionamiento de la Comisión Gestora del Ayuntamiento de Marbella. 4.3. La posible responsabilidad compartida de lo acontecido en Marbella como causa generadora de la disolución del Ayuntamiento.-V. LA DISOLUCIÓN DE CORPORACIONES LOCALES POR MAFIA EN ITALIA: UNA MEDIDA PREVENTIVA EXTRAORDINARIA PARA TUTELAR LA SE-GURIDAD Y EL ORDEN PÚBLICO.-6. REFLEXIONES FINALES. * Este trabajo tiene su origen en el curso de doctorado «El Gobierno como órgano constitucional» dentro del programa Las transformaciones del Estado de Derecho,
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