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Analysis of the Stockholm Convention on Persistant Organic Pollutants

Analysis of the Stockholm Convention on Persistant Organic Pollutants
By Marco Antonio Olsen

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Product Description

This work analyzes the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) prepared under the auspices of the United Nations Environment Programme Chemical Division. The treaty was adopted at the Conference of Plenipotentiaries in Stockholm on 24 May 2001, and was open for signature at United Nations Headquarters in New York until 22 May 2002. It is the first international legal instrument to focus attention on the dangers of persistent organic pollutants - chemicals that are commonly used as pesticides in agriculture and to control insects causing diseases like malaria. At the same time, these chemical substances are carcinogenic, mutagenic, and teratogenic, posing grave risks to human and animal health and the environment. The treaty is a comprehensive global attempt to reduce the risks to human health and the environment from the release of these persistent organic pollutants, currently known as "the dirty dozen."

This analysis:

· Chronicles the Stockholm Convention negotiations, discusses the Stockholm treaty's intricacies and analyzes its thirty articles


· Explains the fundamentals of POPs, their chemical properties, toxicology and common and/or historical uses


· Discusses the history of POPs contamination, how the modern era of synthetic pesticide production began and its effect on today's world


· Concentrates on the science and chemistry of the twelve chemicals addressed in the Stockholm Convention and examines the politics evolving around them


· Provides explicit examples of the harmful effects that these chemicals have on human and animal populations and environment


· Looks at the role of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in negotiating the treaty


· Includes full text of the Stockholm Convention with annexes.


Product Details

  • Published on: 2003-12-23
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 177 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review

This concise treatise is the only book to date on the subject of the Stockholm Convention, but is comprehensive enough to give the reader a thorough grasp of the background, terms, and ramifications of the agreement. Olsen's writing is detailed and systematic, yet his style is clear and accessible enough that the book can serve as an introduction to the field of international environmental law. As the only extant monograph on the Stockholm Convention, it is a smart addition to any library."

Drury Stevenson, Visiting Scholar, Yale Law School, Assistant Professor of Law, South Texas College, Cornell International Law Journal


Customer Reviews

Excellent treatise on the Stockholm Convention5
Professor Marco Olsen offers a glimpse into the intricacies of this important treaty in his brilliant new book, Analysis of the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants. His concise treatise is the only book to date on the subject of the Stockholm Convention, but is comprehensive enough to give the reader a thorough grasp of the background, terms, and ramifications of the agreement. Olsen's writing is detailed and systematic, yet his style is clear and accessible enough that the book can serve as an introduction to the field of international environmental law. As the only extant monograph on the Stockholm Convention, is it a smart addition to any library.

Olsen's book is as timely as it is well-written. The Bush Administration has proposed a bill to make the Convention's terms the law of the land in the United States; democrats have sponsored a rival proposal that goes further and automatically incorporates by reference any future terms amended to the Convention. No matter which proposal wins, Stockholm is soon to be a legal reality confronting American corporations and exporters. The Convention itself is scheduled to go into effect in May 2004, now that the requisite number of countries has ratified it. Buy this book!