Part IX International Environmental Law in National/Regional Courts, Ch.64 India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan

Ghosh Shibani
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Abstract

This chapter focuses on international environmental law (IEL) in the courts of India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. Review of the case law reveals that Indian courts have led the adoption of the IEL principles in this region, with occasional references to IEL by Bangladeshi and Pakistani courts. This appears to follow the trend of non-environmental cases, where also the Bangladeshi and Pakistani judiciary is more reluctant than the Indian courts to turn to international law. Although courts in the three countries have engaged with IEL, it has mostly been at a superficial level. Their reliance on IEL is not always accompanied by strong judicial reasoning, making it difficult to determine their content and scope, and even their relevance in particular scenarios. Given development imperatives in these countries, courts are often faced with the ‘economy/development versus environment’ question. In such situations, the courts rely on IEL in an instrumental fashion in support of the final outcome of the case, rather than engaging with the substantive content of the IEL principle.
第九部分国家/区域法院的国际环境法,印度、孟加拉国和巴基斯坦
本章重点介绍印度、孟加拉国和巴基斯坦法院的国际环境法。对判例法的审查表明,印度法院在该地区率先采用了法律法规原则,孟加拉国和巴基斯坦法院偶尔也提到法律法规。这似乎遵循了非环境案件的趋势,孟加拉国和巴基斯坦的司法机构也比印度法院更不愿意求助于国际法。虽然这三个国家的法院都与IEL有过接触,但大多停留在表面层面。他们对IEL的依赖并不总是伴随着强有力的司法推理,因此难以确定其内容和范围,甚至难以确定其在特定情况下的相关性。鉴于这些国家的发展需要,法院经常面临“经济/发展与环境”的问题。在这种情况下,法院以一种工具性的方式依赖法律依据来支持案件的最终结果,而不是涉及法律依据原则的实质性内容。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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