Global Environmental Law: Context and Theory, Challenge and Promise

Abstract Few issue areas exemplify the centrifugal forces that have prompted the emergence of global law scholarship better than the environment. With its propensity to blur or transcend conventional distinctions between national and international, public and private, and formal and informal, environmental governance offers a consummate case study to test the promise and perils of global law. In this article we situate global environmental law in the broader debate about lawmaking and application beyond the nation state, tracing the evolution and elusive boundaries of this nascent field. Our survey allows us to identify conceptual ambiguities and missed opportunities in the literature on global environmental law, including challenges to its normativity and legitimacy. From there, however, we proceed to outline a twofold opportunity for the global environmental law project: (i) an opportunity to enrich environmental law with more diverse and inclusive practices; and (ii) an opportunity for collaborative self-reflexivity by the scholars and practitioners of environmental law as these not only interpret and apply but, through their work, actively shape the content of the law.


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This article was inspired by discussions on global environmental law between three scholars who approached the topic from different perspectives, with different degrees of scepticism and enthusiasm. The starting point of these discussions was our curiosity to better understand what global environmental law is, why this scholarship has emerged, and how it relates to the ongoing rich discussions on global law, as well as on law and globalization more generally. A second motivation for this article was our desire to better understand and articulate our concerns with regard to global (environmental) lawthat is, with regard to what we see as a transformative agenda and a project that seeks to change in fundamental ways how we understand law, lawmaking, the validity of legal sources, and the nature of legitimacy. We acknowledge and emphasize the need to engage with these issues in greater depth than past global environmental law scholarship has done. At the same time, we are optimistic about the transformative potential of global environmental law, and the opportunities it provides to better integrate into our academic thinking the varied changes we are witnessing across the landscape of international environmental law, all the while ensuring that the numerous affected actors and their voices and concerns are better reflected in the processes related to the formulation, expansion, and implementation of global environmental law. Our third motivation therefore was the desire to explore and identify further opportunities for ourselves and other scholars to engage with the global environmental law research and teaching agendas, and identify openings to feed these insights into the ongoing broader discussions on global and transnational law.
The structure of the article reflects these three aspirations, and our divergent starting points with regard to global (environmental) law are undoubtedly reflected in the contents. The article begins by situating global environmental law scholarship in the broader landscape of global law and transnational law scholarship. It argues that international environmental lawyers have thus far not fully exploited the opportunities to engage with these broader debates. The article then turns towards examining the several important challenges that arise from the idea of global (environmental) law and the transformative agenda it inevitably entails. It argues that, while global (environmental) law scholars have not put forward a strong and explicit argument to support the idea of global environmental law as a body of norms that would apply universally across legal systems and jurisdictions regardless of their formal pedigree, global environmental law scholarship nevertheless reaches beyond merely observing and recording empirical transformations in the legal landscape. On the contrary, we see global (environmental) law as a consciously transformative agenda that is driven partly by academic activism towards a paradigm change that ultimately challenges received notions of the meaning of law, lawmaking, legitimacy, and the validity of legal sources. Still, we also observe an urgent need to better integrate the study of such jurisgenerative and normative categories into global environmental law scholarship. We see also an opportunity to brandish the transformative potential of global law against a perennial challenge of traditional lawmaking beyond the domestic realm: its persistent legitimacy gap, which expanded participation in a process of inclusive deliberationallowed by the more fluid Union (EU) and the World Trade Organization (WTO). 8 More closely related to the focus of this article, the ascent of global environmental riskssuch as climate change, ozone depletion, and biodiversity lossis also playing a role in the globalization of law. 9 Together, the forces of globalization are seen as weakening the 'great divide' between international and national law. 10 The traditional and still very much prevailing vision of the legal world dates back to the creation of the Westphalian system in the 17 th century, dominated by the concept of sovereign states and the dichotomy of national and international law. While this image includes transnational legal activity in the sense of public and private international law crossing state boundaries, both of these concepts remain highly state-centric 11 as their focus is on relationships among sovereign states and national legal orders respectively. 12 This traditional vision of the legal world has been fittingly labelled the 'black box model'. 13 However, with globalization, neat organizations of the legal universe have come to face multiple challenges. 14 Sovereign states remain crucial, but their role is rapidly changing. Various actors in globalizationsuch as non-governmental organizations (NGOs), law firms, financial markets, and multinational corporationsare taking part in the creation of new kinds of normativity, and new border-crossing realities are evolving and transforming. 15 As Husa indicates, 'the need for a non-nation-state-bound understanding of overlapping legal sources is growing and the necessity of knowledge of how to deal with polycentrism and pluralism of laws has grown intensely'. 16 However, the ongoing scholarly debates are far from conclusive: there is no consensus on how much globalization has influenced law or whether this influence has been beneficial or detrimental. 17 In legal scholarship, different theories and approaches are therefore under construction, seeking to accommodate law that does not fit into the traditional categories of 8 V. Heyvaert, Transnational Environmental Regulation and Governance: Purpose, Strategies and Principles (Cambridge University Press, 2018), pp. 6-7. 9 Ibid., p. 7.  13 Ibid., pp. 12-3. Tuori refers to W. Twining, Globalisation and Legal Theory (Northwestern University Press, 2000).  15 Husa, n. 2 above, p. 6. 16 Ibid., p. 8. 17 Ibid., p. 4.
Transnational Environmental Law, 8:3 (2019), pp. 405-435 national law and international law. The key ones include global legal pluralism, 18 transnational law, 19 and global law. 20 Scholarship on global legal pluralism builds on anthropological research on colonial and neo-colonial law, and historical work on medieval law, 21 to better understand the role of multiple non-state actors in influencing the development of law at different levels and sites, 22 including on the basis of values and knowledge systems that have been historically left at the margins of negotiations or public/private-driven action. 23 One of the focus areas is the interplay of international law and the customary law of indigenous peoples. 24 The concept of 'transnational law' was coined by Jessup in the 1950s, at a time when hope in public international law and public international institutions had withered as a result of the Cold War. 25 Jessup was particularly interested in the ability of private international law to resolve transnational problems through its decentralized system of allocating jurisdictional 'power' among national courts, which then used choice of law techniques to decide the applicable law. 26 The relationship between private and public international law has continued to attract scholarly attention until today, including with regard to the delimitation (and potentially strategic use) of states' regulatory authority and (barriers to) the protection of fundamental rights. 27 While a wealth of literature on transnational law has subsequently emergedincluding more than 50 journals with the terms 'transnational law' or 'transnational legal' in their title 28the notion is often used 'without adequate conceptual work on what the term covers'. 29 A broad conception of transnational law, also reflected in Jessup's work, includes both public and private international law, as well as law governing transnational activities not traditionally included within these areas. 30 A narrow conception sees transnational law as composed only of norms that cross national borders and do not fit the traditional categories of public and private international law. 31 Teubner's work, for example, has drawn inspiration from a scholarly debate on lex mercatoria and the highly controversial arguments that 'merely "private" orders (contracts and associations) produce valid law without authorization from and control by the state' and that 'lex mercatoria is valid outside the nation state and even outside international relations'. 32 According to Teubner, such views have broken some taboos about the necessary connections between law and the state. 33 Also, the discussion on global law is characterized by fluid conceptual boundaries. Shaffer, for instance, has argued that transnational law and global law are partly overlapping notions in the sense that, under each, 'law is being denationalized, to varying degrees' because the legal norms may not be part of international and national law as conventionally construed. 34 Halliday and Shaffer have, in fact, argued that the 'terminology of "global" law is misleading because much legal ordering today is not global in its geographic reach, but it nonetheless involves variation in legal ordering beyond the nation state'. 35 In their view, the concepts of transnational legal orders and transnational legal ordering best capture this reality as 'the geographic, substantive, and organizational scope of such legal ordering varies, and because it involves both public and private actors'. 36 In turn, Walker has pointed out that 'there has been little serious discussionand little agreement where there has been discussionon what is meant by "global law"'. 37 He characterizes global law as a 'pattern of heavily overlapping, mutually connected and openly extended institutions, norms and processes'. 38 He then distinguishes global law as a particular subset of transnational law, in that global law is characterized by a 'practical endorsement of, or commitment to the universal or otherwise global-in-general warrant of some laws or some dimensions of law'. 39  Global law … may or may not be sourced and institutionalised at the planetary level. It can be more or less actively endorsed and fully realised, and more or less concrete and positivised in its normative claim or orientation. It can also be either universal or merely planetary in scope or ambition, provided it meets a threshold requirement of not being confined by and to any particular sub-global territorial jurisdiction. 40 Global law seeks to bring some coherence to the 'disorder of normative orders' that is seen to define the contemporary post-national constellation of legal authority. 41 For Dias Varella: [This] new global law is continually self-reproduced by networks of authors and highly specialized norms, both public and private … It is distinguished from classic national law in that it is not limited by national boundaries and by the lack of territorial bases, oftentimes by networks of invisible actors, such as markets, professional communities, or social networks. 42 Walker has placed the various divergent theories of global law into two main categories: convergence-promoting or divergence-accommodating approaches. The first category focuses on encouraging a general dynamic of legal convergence, while the second seeks to accommodate a general dynamic of legal divergence. 43 According to Walker: [what binds the two categories together] is that both acknowledge and seek to address the increasing complexity of the post-national legal landscapeits diversity and fluidity of form, its multiplication of new forms of legally coded identity and difference, its congestion, its cross-systemic overlapping claims and focal concerns, its mechanisms of mutual recognition and interlock; and, it follows, its irreducibility to a state-sovereigntist logic of mutually exclusive jurisdictional allocation. 44 What remains unclear in Walker's contribution, however, is the relationship between his vision of global law and classic elements of international law (such as a treaty objective) or potentially novel elements (global goals such as the Sustainable Development Goals 45 ) as the kind of 'universal or otherwise global-in-general warrant' that would distinguish global law from transnational law. This gap in Walker's reflection offers an opportunity for international (environmental) lawyers to contribute to the global law debate more generally. 40 Ibid., p. 55. This is the broader context and background for our discussion of global environmental law. Despite conceptual ambiguity and overlap, the foregoing visions of global law have something in common: a sense that the legal world and scholarship are in need of rethinking; yet new visions and concepts are still in the process of being formed, and basic ideas and indeed approaches are anything but settled. There is clearly scope for environmental lawyers to contribute to these debates, as several global law scholars have singled out global law phenomena in international environmental law. 46 3.    :   ?
What is global environmental law and where does global environmental law scholarship stand today? Also, in the environmental field a number of scholars have awakened to the need to change the way in which we think about (and research 47 ) environmental law. This realization is reflected in the growing body of scholarship on transnational environmental law 48 and global environmental law. 49 As this section will highlight, however, scholarship on global environmental law to date has assimilated the broader debate on law and globalization, and global law, to a limited degree only. Likewise, we assess the extent to which global environmental legal scholarship so far has missed an opportunity to make original contributions to the debate on global law. While the idea of global environmental law has made increasingly frequent appearances in environmental law scholarship since the 1990s, 50 there seems to be no uniform and detailed definition of what global environmental law is or what the concept means. 51 Developing such an understanding also falls outside the scope of this article, which focuses on taking stock of the current state of global environmental law scholarship in this regard. In a well-known article published in 2009, Yang and Percival argued that global environmental law is emerging, and defined this new field as 'an evolving set of substantive principles, tools, and concepts derived from elements of national and international environmental law'. 52 In their view it is 'no longer possible to see the national environmental law systems as distinct or separate from international  For recent in-depth discussion, see Heyvaert, n. 8 above, especially pp. 1-24. 49 See text between nn. 49 and 86 for detailed discussion and references. environmental law or from each other'. 53 Instead, global environmental law is 'an amalgam of national and international environmental law and their interactions'. 54 Yang subsequently specified that global environmental law is 'a common set of environmental legal principles and norms in national, international, and transnational law that are utilized to protect the environment and public health as well as to manage and conserve natural resources'. 55 One of the examples he mentioned is environmental impact assessment, which is found in most national legal systems as well as in various international environmental instruments, 'and even as a transboundary norm'. 56 Subsequent work by Percival highlights that global law is 'not a set of globally harmonized regulatory standards but rather a term to describe the more complex set of phenomena that are occurring in several fields of law, in particular environmental law'. 57 According to Percival, the term 'global environmental law' is used as it 'appears to better capture the current complex realities of developments in the environmental field because transdisciplinary distinctions between domestic and international law, and between public and private law continue to erode'. 58 Some areas of international environmental law arguably are more reflective than others of the trends and drivers underlying the emergence of global law scholarship more generally. More than any other area, perhaps, this can be said of the continuously evolving and highly differentiated global regime on climate change mitigation and adaptation, which traverses planes of governance, recruits public and private actors, draws on traditional regulation and enforcement as well as facilitation and flexible market approaches, and encompasses difficult questions of global justice and responsibility. Still, most environmental problems are inherently transboundary and cross-cutting in nature, and require action at all levels and by multiple actors for an effective resolution. It should therefore be no surprise that global environmental law has been one of the earliest thematic areas to see a proliferation of global law scholarship, and that trend is likely to continue.
In line with broader literature on global and transnational law, global environmental law scholarship has called attention to common themes that challenge our traditional understandings of environmental law, the most notable of which is the growing importance of non-state actors. Hey highlights the role of non-state actors in actively interacting with states and global institutions involved in environmental decision making, as well as participating in standard setting, for example, through voluntary codes of conduct. 59 Percival emphasizes that 'private parties are now playing a major role in the emergence of global environmental law'. 60 While the relevance of non-state actors 53 Ibid. 54 Ibid.

55
T. Yang, 'The Emerging Practice of Global Environmental Law' (2012) 1(1) Transnational Environmental Law, pp. 53-65, at 54. 56 Ibid. 57 Percival, n. 50 above, p. 633. 58 Ibid., p. 584. 59 Hey, n. 51 above, pp. 6-7. 60 Percival, n. 50 above, p. 624. in international environmental law has already been described in the abundant literature on environmental governance and soft law, the question of whether the cumulative effect of these complex changes signals an existential crisis of international and national environmental law has been posed but not exhaustively addressed in the incipient global environmental law scholarship.
Even if the notion of 'global law' may instinctively bring to mind the idea of a distinct body of law that applies universally or globally, no strong and explicit argument has been made of global environmental law as a separate body of law in the sense that some environmental norms would or should apply globally across legal systems and jurisdictions regardless of their formal pedigree. This aligns with Walker's argument that the notion of 'global law' does not refer to the law's pedigree, but to its global destination. 61 Hey, for example, has described various substantive and procedural environmental principles in order to provide an overview of the discourse of global environmental law, while at the same time noting that most, if not all, of the principles she discusses 'are part of treaty law, while many also qualify as customary law'. 62 This implies that she does not consider these principles to be universally applicable merely by virtue of them being part of global environmental law. Morgera, in turn, has rather underscored the need to engage with global environmental law as a research and teaching agenda: A perspective informed by global environmental law, understood as the promotion of environmental protection through a plurality of legal mechanisms relying on a plurality of legal orders, thus prompts the study of environmental law at the international, regional, national and sub-national levels as inter-related and mutually influencing systems. 63 Yet this does not obviate the need to explore whether: the practice of global environmental law can lead to innovative forms of law, be that the result of an increasingly conscious and strategic reliance on the mutual influences between different legal orders, or of the jurisgenerative role of global scholars and practitioners. 64 Most of global environmental law scholarship seems to be empirically based, highlighting various rapid and groundbreaking changes that scholars and practitioners are witnessing on the ground. To that end, its main contribution to date has been methodological. According to Morgera: [global environmental law] further calls for an analysis of the practice of non-State actors, particularly international organizations, international networks of experts providing advice on environmental legislation across the globe, international civil society, bilateral donors, indigenous peoples and local communities and the private sector. 65 61 Walker, n. 20 above. Along similar lines, an important part of global environmental law scholarship highlights the globalization of environmental law practice, 66 and the ensuing demands on environmental law scholars and practitioners. According to Yang, international environmental law used to be seen largely as a specialized area of public international law, outside the expertise of national environmental lawyers. 67 Similarly, those working on international environmental law tended to leave questions of domestic environmental law to national law experts. However, this situation has quickly changed. There is now a greater need for domestic environmental law practice to be informed by international law, and for international environmental lawyers to understand the operation and requirements of national environmental law systems. 68 The emergence of 'global jurists' is also a key notion emerging from Walker's work discussed above. 69 While there is no explicit argument that global environmental law constitutes an ensemble of universally valid norms, a firmly embedded notion in global environmental law scholarship is the idea that legal concepts travel globally between jurisdictions and other normative systems. According to Yang and Percival, '[t]he globalization of environmental law means that regulatory approaches, legal principles, and institutional structures will be similar or have analogues across different national and international systems'. 70 Their spread relates partly to the common physical and technological origins of environmental problems, the common scientific and technological basis for resolving them, and the objective of global environmental law to address common interest problems that cannot be resolved by any state on its own. 71 Transnational environmental litigation is also contributing to this trend; 72 the rise in climate change litigation across the globe, for instance, has been driven partly by efforts to promote the development of climate law in different jurisdictions across the globe.
In terms of methodology, there has been only limited scholarly reflection thus far on what the study of global (environmental) law requires, and how this nascent field differs, for example, from the study of international (environmental) law. While most 'grand theories' of lawsuch as those formulated by Hart and Kelsenare global in the sense that they argue something universal about the general nature of law, 73 Section 4 below will show that global environmental law implicitly or explicitly challenges key aspects of such theories. With its starting point in complex and observable developments, such as the diverse manifestations of globalization, global law defies the conceptual abstraction and simplicity of such 'grand theories'. Altogether, its remit is theoretical as much as it is applied, inviting the question of whether 'a genuinely global 66 Yang, n. 55 above, p. 56. 67 Ibid., p. 55.  69 Walker, n. 41 above. 70 Yang & Percival, n. 52 above, p. 652. 71 Hey, n. 51 above. 72 Percival, n. 50 above, pp. 601 ff. 73 Husa, n. 2 above, p. 100. view of law' is possible if legal cultures are different and 'harmonization [is] plagued by legal-culture-related difficulties'. 74 According to Husa, therefore, 'a global way of conceiving law means that also legal theories need to be re-established and denationalized'. 75 He has identified the need for methodological pluralismi.e. the need for multiple methods to study multiple legalities 76and noted that: Nationally oriented legal doctrine seems poorly equipped to meet pluralist forms of overlapping, interdependent, and sometimes competing non-national normativities … Other approaches, such as comparative, economic and anthropological methods are needed alongside a more conventional doctrinal approach. 77 Thus far, only a limited amount of global environmental law scholarship has reflected on legal research methods for global environmental law. The main focus of the limited body of existing literature concerns the relevance of comparative methods. Wiener's work illustrates the borrowing and travel of ideas and legal concepts (such as emissions trading) from national environmental law to international environmental law, 78 whereas the travel of legal norms and ideas from international to national environmental laws is a well-known phenomenon. Morgera has looked into interrelated dynamics of norm diffusion across different international environmental regimes, between multilateral and bilateral treaties and mechanisms, as well as through negotiating practices at different levels. 79 The interest of comparative lawyers in various forms of 'contact' between different legal phenomena appears useful to foster in international environmental lawyers an appreciation of diversity in local influence and global patterns. 80 Equally, the acknowledgement by comparatists that various open-ended and selfreflexive methodologies are needed to fully appreciate mutual dependencies between legal phenomena is helpful in recognizing the risks involved in this kind of research and identifying biases, such as the assumption that global environmental law phenomena are desirable or innovative. 81 These considerations had already emerged in Twining's broader reflections on global law. 82 There are, however, bound to be multiple methodological and conceptual implications of global environmental law that have not yet been identified, let alone adequately captured by existing scholarship. Some of the most obvious of these relate to those aspects of global environmental law that directly challenge our received notions concerning valid law and state monopoly on legitimate lawmaking. As we indicate below in Section 4, there is a need to 74 Ibid., p. 103. 75 Ibid., p. 113. 76 Ibid., p. 130. 77 Ibid., p. 132. engage with these issues in greater depth and rigour than past global environmental law scholarship has done.
Overall, global environmental law scholarship has focused on developing a more comprehensive and inclusive vision of environmental law that reaches beyond the established categories of international and national law and takes into consideration actors and sources that traditional legal doctrines have deemed irrelevant. It has drawn attention to global travel of legal concepts and mutual influences and interdependencies between different legal systems and levels of regulation. It has also highlighted the increasingly global outlook of environmental law as a profession. In doing so, global environmental law scholarship echoes key themes from the broader discussion of global law. On the whole, however, global environmental law scholarship has only sporadically engaged with the more theoretical academic debate on global law and its deeper reflections on questions of power and influence behind global legal phenomena and unexpected interactions among legal sources at different levels. 83 One exception is Hey, who has invited international environmental lawyers to engage with global administrative law 84 in the face of the growing importance and limited accountability of non-state actors in exercising public powers, and of global institutions 85 that still reflect the legacy of colonialism. Our argument, however, is that the project of global (environmental) law necessarily extends beyond mere observation and the recording of changes on the ground. Views such as that expressed by Teubneraccording to whom the 'emerging global … law is a legal order in its own right' 87reveal an ambition of the proponents of global law to offer more than the impartial representation of observed facts. Even where scholars have conceded that global law is not a discrete system of norms or legal practice, they have described it in terms of its directionality and thereby invoked a transformative agenda, 88 as described earlier in this article. Inherent in much of the global (environmental) law debate is, in other words, a normative component, an apparent aspiration to revisit questions about the validity of norms and, ultimately, the ontology of law itself. This was also picked up by Walker, who indicated that global law finds itself in between settled doctrine and an aspirational approach 89 in which specialist (professional and academic) communities are not only 'sources of expertise and learning in matters of the emergent global law and as instruments of its application', but are also 'active players in the fashioning and shaping of global law'. 90 It is that dimension of global law which has elicited discomfort among more traditionally minded legal scholars, prompting questions about whether global law is indeed 'law'. 91 It is also a dimension that does not seem to be captured adequately in the existing body of global environmental law scholarship and that would merit more careful attention. To the extent that global law narratives espouse a normative component, they transcend the boundary between empirical statements of 'what is' and normative yearnings of what 'ought to be' and, by extension, challenge received definitions of what constitutes valid law. For mainstream lawyers, the distinction between law and other normative categories lies at the very epicentre of their profession and is, in many ways, constitutive of legal practice. 92 Although views on the exact demarcation between law and other sources of normativity have varied over time across 87 Teubner, n. 18 above, p. 4. 88 Global law, according to Walker (n. 20 above, pp. 19-22) is 'an adjectival rather than a nominal category' that 'does not specify any particular source or pedigree, and so may account for itself in many different ways and may claim or assume authority on many different grounds'; yet, at the same time, it 'modifies law's canonical forms' and 'claims a global warrant and makes a global appeal in the sense of claiming or assuming a universal or globally pervasive justification for its application'; global law, thus, becomes defined by reference to 'its destination rather than its source'. 89 See Walker, n. 20 above, pp. 22, 26. 90 Ibid., p. 31, and more generally pp. 31-8. 91 See, e.g., R. Collins, 'The Slipperiness of "Global Law"' (2017) 37(3) Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, pp. 714-39, at 715 ('Does the accumulation of these globalising trends, and the attempt to accommodate these post-national legal forms, give rise to something that can be coherently described as "global different schools of jurisprudence and moral or political philosophy, 93 contemporary lawyers by and large will tend to premise their recognition of valid law on an accepted doctrine of legal sources, usually expressed by way of a posited social fact. This view, which has seen its greatest theoretical elaboration in the jurisprudential tradition of legal positivism, 94 assumes the existence of conventions which determine certain facts or events taken to yield established ways for the creation, modification, and annulment of legal norms; these 'facts are the sources of law conventionally identified as such in each and every modern legal system'. 95 At the domestic level, sources of valid law will commonly be defined in a national constitution and entail adoption by state bodies (such as a legislature) and adjudication through an ordained procedure. At the international level, acknowledgement of a recognized canon of legal sources has similarly become a matter of doctrinal practice, 96 as reflected in Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice. 97 What both have in common is an innate connection with the state. 98 In its diverse formulations, global law acknowledges these established sources, 99 but treats them as a mere starting point for its central focus on legal norms beyond the state 93 Debate has focused, in particular, on whether the legal validity of a norm is purely conditional on its source and form, or alsoand even primarilyon its content, with legal positivism as first (1) famously lists as the primary sources applicable to disputes brought before it 'international conventions, whether general or particular', 'international custom, as evidence of a general practice accepted as law', and 'the general principles of law recognized by civilized nations'. 98 Describing this mainstream perspective on sources of valid law as 'theories of the "law-state" … The nation-state is the source of law, the state is jurisdictionally limited, and nothing can be "law" that is not produced or at least sanctioned by the state': K.C. Culver & M. Giudice, Legality's Borders: An Essay in General Jurisprudence (Oxford University Press, 2010), p. xxiv. the regulatory monopoly of which it rejects. 100 Motivated by the hypothesis of a declining role of states, 101 this alternative perspective reaches well outside the traditional canon of accepted sources, embracing a broad variety of public and private norms that 'overlap or overlay each other in criss-crossing patterns of normativity'. 102 In the resulting paradigm, conventional sources are afforded a diminished role relative to the opinions of academics and international civil society; 103 indeed, as Walker describes it, 'some of the more powerful instances of global law … are of the prepositive or non-positive variety'. 104 Such propensity to lessen the importance of traditional sources doctrine is but one avenue through which global law softens the dividing line between legal and other norms, challenging the distinctiveness of law and, in so doing, the unity which traditionally defines a legal order. 105 Another is the ready acceptance of norms with varying degrees of normativity and binding effect, including 'soft law'such as the decisions, recommendations or codes of good practice adopted by international and national organizations 106and contractual arrangements governed by private law the legal effect of which has traditionally been confined to parties. 107 This fluidity of global law again departs from the more rigid understanding of normativity in much of jurisprudence. Over the course of legal history, the stipulations enshrined in law have been seen commonly as binary in nature rather than a matter of degree: law is either valid, or it is not; it is either binding, or it is not. 108 Concern about the implications of 'relative normativity' 109 has prompted some scholars to reject altogether notions such as 'soft 99 In folding 'laws' or 'dimensions of law' within its own terms, global law takes for granted existing legal forms and their defining criteria and merely supplements or modifies them as circumstantially appropriate with reference to the notion of a 'universal or otherwise global-in-general warrant': Walker, n. 20 above, p. 19. law', 110 whereas attempts to derive broader legal effects from private law activity have been met with their own concerns. 111 Not all legal scholars share this view, however. 112 There are several areas of international practice, including the area of environmental protection, which arguably illustrate the legal significance of soft law. 113 All this should not suggest that global law ignores traditional or mainstream conceptions of law. Walker concedes that, for global law to have a legal claim and be more than an aspiration, it must retain an 'element of establishment'. 114 Dilling and Markus contend that informal and private norms still 'have to be "re-embedded" into well-established political and legal processes' and 'complemented, endorsed or limited by formal legal structures' to have legal effect. 115 As for the question of relative normativity, even proponents of the global law project have shown reluctance to abandon the dichotomy of legal and other norms, opting instead for alternative rationalizations of variable normativity. 116 In what might be described as an 'ironic circularity', 117 global law seems to draw its legal pedigree from an initial anchoring in received sources, but simultaneously holds 'out an additional, independent normative claim that is taken to transcend the boundaries of existing legal categories'. 118 But for that latter dimension, one could conclude that global law is little more than a labelling exercise, an 'empirical mapping of scholarly trends and the fluid dynamics of the globalisation of legal study and practice', 119 which assembles elements of lex lata and lex ferenda around a connective tissue, their shared 'global warrant'. 120 Of these elements, some are accepted variants of binding domestic and international law; some reside in a penumbra of contested, but evolving normativity; and some, finally, lie in the realm of aspiration, or, as Walker describes it, are reflections of a presumptive 'destination' of the law. 121 Global law would not endeavour to represent a new and separate realm of lawwith its own sources, institutions, and doctrinesoperating alongside more established areas of law, but rather pursue theno less modestepistemic ambition to frame developments across various planes of public and private authority the rapid expansion and complex interactions of which call for a new conceptual paradigm, a 'unique mode of thinking about law in a global context'. 122 Yet, as mentioned earlier, such an interpretation of the global law project would be too simple a dismissal of its normative thrust, and would risk underestimating its constitutive power. If nothing else, by calling it global 'law', the conceptintentionally or notimplies a claim to legality that goes beyond mere description. For Walker, discourses on global law provide a channel for legal scholars and professionals to effectively reformulate what counts as a valid legal argument under conditions of globalization; these 'specialists of global law … become involved in "taking law to the world" through various different but mutually reinforcing modes and gradations of jurisgenerative activity'. 123 It is precisely in that contested space between 'constructive discovery or creative projection' 124 that the promise and potential pitfalls of global law reside. For wherever global law purports the existence of norms beyond traditional forms and sources, it must also raise questions about the authority to adopt such norms, their legitimacy, and accountability for their implementation. 125 That is also where global law simultaneously faces its greatest vulnerability and can realize its greatest promise. Law on all levels has endured perennial accusations of a democratic deficit. International law, in particular, has been the target of scathing critique, with its current practice likened to the triumph of an unelected and bureaucratic Hofmafia over the true will of international society. 126 However, criticism has also been levelled against domestic law, where the legitimacy of legislatorsbased on, at best, highly aggregative representation and a thin veneer of accountability through 119  infrequent and flawed electionshas been censored as a wanting basis of political authority. 127 Still, in our liquid modernity, where faith in universal truths has been largely replaced by a pluralism of values and ideas, 128 normative frameworks have been unable to offer a lasting alternative to the frail legitimacy of formal, posited law. 129 Against this persistent tension between flawed facts and unredeemed norms, an alternative foundation for the validity of law could find new traction through the transformative potential of global law: deliberative democracy. Based on different strands of newer social and political theory, yet eminently practical in its aspiration, it seeks to close the legitimacy gap through an observable social factnamely, strengthened participation in a process of pluralist deliberation. In the place of an ordained and, ultimately, contestable truth, it calls for an inclusive process of collective reasoning and active public debate. 130 Different approaches have been suggested to actualize such a model of deliberative democracy, from the public reasoning process evoked by Rawls 131 to the communicative rationality and ideal discourse outlined by Habermas. 132 What these approaches have in common, however, is inclusive participation and equality of access for free and autonomous individuals, groups, and interests, including those who have been historically marginalized in collective decision making. 133 Anchored in such deliberation, law becomes the medium for transforming communicative power into administrative power, a means for making civic will formation effective in resolving societal challenges. 134 In actual practice, a perfect consensus based on the foregoing ideal of democratic deliberation may remain elusive in a socially complex and morally divided world, 135 but that does not lessen its desirability 136 and may even have its own advantages. 137 Its pursuit, moreover, creates a theoretical entry point for global law to enrich and strengthen legal ordering on multiple levels.
With its responsiveness to the fluidity of public authority in a postnational world, and its proximity to pluralist conceptions of normativity and justice in the international order, global law offers an opportunity for enhanced deliberation and inclusivity. It expands the range of relevant actors to subnational jurisdictions, private corporations, minorities, and civil society more generally, and can thereby help to bridge the spatial and temporal distance between those who generate the law and those whose lives are governed by it. This acquires particular importance in an environmental context 138 in which important stakeholdersincluding future generations and the natural environment itselfare routinely excluded from existing democratic processes 139 and now may be given a voice by dedicated interest groups. Stronger involvement of technical experts and affected communities can improve the substantive quality of environmental governance, better ground it in local conditions 140 and thereby impart an alternative form of legitimacy. 141 Altogether, greater participation in democratic processes has been linked to improved environmental outcomes by generating public support for relevant policies, enhancing institutional capacities of public agencies, and adding a layer of accountability that state actors alone cannot provide. 142 Baber and Bartlett go so far as to declare that a deliberative approach is therefore vital 'for environmental law to attain global reach'. 143 Still, for global law to realize this vision and help the democratic processes that precede law formation and implementation to 'catch up with the forces of a globalized economy', 144 it must meet certain conditions. Collective choices have to originate in reasoned debate and public justification rather than be made 'by blind acceptance of the views of established authorities, by deals concluded among vested interests, or by recourse to intimidation'. 145 Discussing the legal quality of global administrative law, Kingsbury has posited a set of principles and practices that, in his view, are constitutive of legality in the public sphere: rationality, proportionality, rule of law, justification, publicity, and transparency. 146 Pauwelyn, Wessel and Wouters, in turn, have highlighted that 'traditional international law, based as it is on state consent, does not have a monopoly on legitimate cooperation'. 147 Indeed, in addition to formal state consent, legitimacy at the international level can also come from 'expertise, an open and inclusive process of deliberation, or the implementation of effective outcomes'. 148 As a conclusion from their comprehensive study of informal international lawmaking, they observe that 'the emerging code of good practice for the development of standards or new forms of cooperation outside international law is normatively thicker' than the traditional validation requirements for international law in the sense of a more inclusive, transparent and predictable process, the involvement of more diverse and expert actors, and more carefully and coherently elaborated output. 149 They have therefore called for a newly calibrated set of criteria that better reflect evolving circumstances, 150 also likening such criteria to the test of 'thick stakeholder consensus'. 151 At the same time, they highlight the crucial role of domestic oversight, arguing that 'to ensure domestic democratic legitimacy, a minimum degree of parliamentary or congressional oversight (not necessarily formal consent) of all international cooperation that affects public policy-making or individual freedomtreaty or not, formal or informalmust be available'. 152 Krisch, in contrast, has argued that legitimacy can be realized in a global legal order by fostering public autonomythat is, by allowing citizens to choose the conditions of their own associationand deliberating contested issues through a pluralist process in which competing associations exercise mutual toleration. 153 Compelling arguments have thus been made for a postnational model of democracy, in which the state and its formal processes are neither indispensable nor sufficient for legitimate and accountable governance, 154 and indeed borders and jurisdictions are themselves open to democratic deliberation. 155 For now, however, it remains unclear whether such aspirations are met in practice, and whether the conditions of open and equal deliberation are possible in those new contexts that stand to supplant or complement traditional state authority in a globalizing world. On a conceptual level, for instance, Stewart has expressed concern that global regulatory bodies will give greater regard to the particular interests and concerns of powerful states and well-organized economic actors, while disregarding the often peripheral interests and concerns of less organized and less powerful groups and vulnerable individuals. 156 At a minimum, that cautions against abandoning the electoral processes and procedural guarantees that have generated legitimacy in existing state polities, suggesting that hybrid forms of governancewhich combine the legitimizing structures of the state with deliberation and contestation beyond the statemay offer greater hope of closing current legitimacy gaps than either states or non-state actors would alone. 157 A survey of current postnational activities in the arena of climate cooperation seems to support this assessment. At a time when several national governments are held captive by populist and nationalist political movements and have begun to withdraw from established channels of environmental diplomacy and rulemaking, the sheer scale and reach of such activities across alternative non-state venues is nothing short of remarkable, and is welcome in its own right as a counterpoint to state retrenchment or paralysis. 158 As early evaluations of the underlying initiatives and processes have shown, however, these efforts, by and large, do not meet the foregoing criteria, and are thus unlikely to serve as a corrective to the deficient legitimacy and accountability of traditional environmental law. 159 An empirical survey of climate initiatives involving non-state actors leads Bäckstrand and Kuyper to conclude that 'transparency and accountability mechanisms are nascent at best, nonexistent at worse', 160 while Widerberg and Pattberg find that shifting patterns of authority in climate governance have 'made it increasingly difficult to understand who should be accountable to whom'. 161 Sheer effectiveness in remedying an environmental threat could compensate for the attested shortfall in procedural legitimacy, 162 but there again the track record of informal climate initiatives has so far been questionable. 163 Overall, the role of nonstate actors in the 'promotion of transparency, consultation, evaluation and correction in global regulatory bodies' appears to have 'remained modest, both in absolute terms and relative to the needs'. 164 While this conclusion, if sustained into the future, would be regrettable, it only reflects an unfulfilled potential and, as such, a missed opportunity. It should then be a void that has yet to be filled. Of greater concern, however, are assertions that global law, far from enhancing the legitimacy of rule-based governance, has actually had the opposite effect. For Collins, the claimed 'globality' of global law risks conveying a false sense of universalism, helping to legitimize what would otherwise be arbitrary local or particular concerns and interests. 165 It is hard to ignore this risk. In his enyclopedic digest of the global law project, Walker repeatedly discusses the important role of 'academic elites' in advancing global law narratives, a cryptic society of 'specialists' operating in 'close-knit … association' and 'led by narrow elites with privileged access to resources, knowledge and networks' that are possessed of 'convergent world-views and an extensive sphere of influence'. 166 One might then ask what influence marginalized communities will have in defining the material content and 'destination' of global lawa system of norms that affects and purportedly protects them.
For Loughlin, global law manifests a triumph of regulatory technique, a science of the 'administration of things' which asks to replace 'the idea of law as the expression of will, and especially the will of political majorities'. 167 He sees global law as 'the expression of a type of instrumental reason', 168 yet that invariably begs the question: whose instrumental reason? 169 Dias Varella, one of the few developing country scholars working on this topic, has described the challenge of global law as follows: The challenge would be to maintain the differences that exist among nations without imposing a fusion of national legal rules, much less imposing legal norms inspired by hegemonic powers, while at the same time constructing some type of global order or, at least, an ordered legal space. 170 It is this risk of instrumental appropriation that has compelled scholars such as Koskenniemi to identify themselves with a formalist, yet politically aware conception of law, which they believe provides a more impartial and, ultimately, more just foundation for the diplomatic relations of states. 171 This is a powerful critique that merits being taken seriously. In as much as global law aspires to a normative idealwhat Walker describes as 'globally defensible good reasons for its invocation' 172it invariably also introduces a measure of contingency; its normative claim cannot be simply substantiated with reference to established source criteria or other constituent rules of legal systems already in force. 173 Walker acknowledges this when he concedes that the attendant projection of global law involves 'a gambit, a calculated risk that its explicit self-sponsorship as a form of law should not be undermined by a lack of prior authorisation'. 174 For some, this gambit strains the limits of acceptability, based on an 'almost maddeningly schizophrenic account of what global law is' and, by extension, what it is not. 175 Yet, while the inherent ambiguities may caution against invoking the 'inevitability' of this '[p]rojected yet oblique, unsettled yet inexorable' project, 176 there can also be no question that global law offers an intriguing vision, an as yet dormant promise of greater inclusiveness and legitimacy in the evolving cross-border relations of humankind.
5.   ,    :       Having discussed the challenge and promise of global environmental law, this section shifts the focus towards the role of global legal experts, as well as the collective practice and professional culture surrounding global environmental law. It calls for global environmental law scholars to be conscious and aware of the legitimacy implications of their project, and therefore encourages them to create and nurture intellectual environments whereby deeper reflection of their personal and collective roles and patterns of influence becomes part of global environmental law scholarship. To be sure, such selfreflexivity and heightened awareness of the scholar's role, influence and potential blind spots 177 can only be supplementary to addressing legitimacy gaps in international and global (environmental) law through the more traditional focus on promoting processes and practices geared towards greater inclusiveness and legitimacy. For trying to imagineeven in good faithpersonal blind spots and biases, and the potentially unwanted consequences of one's professional engagement, seems destined to be less effective than actually engaging and earnestly listening to those whose voices and views tend to be marginalized in the practice of global environmental law. At the same time, the need for awareness of the considerable but largely hiddeneven unconsciouspower and influence that lawyers exercise in their expert roles has been highlighted in international legal scholarship in ways that should not be ignored. 178 In his exploration of 'rule by expertise', Kennedy laments 'the lost opportunity to engage expertise as a doorway to responsible decision rather than as a substitute for ethical reflection and political choice'. 179 He also argues: International lawyers can hardly avoid coming face-to-face with the diversity and analytical porousness of their expertise. Such an experience of legal pluralism might open the way of exploring law's role in distributive conflict and the responsibility of legal experts for the outcomes of struggle. 180 This has resulted in calls for methodological honesty and an explicit, conscious and proactive engagement with national, ideological and structural biases among international lawyers. 181 Elsewhere in the social sciences, calls have been made for 'new forms of radical reflexivity' that include 'the explicit articulation of values, assumptions and normative orientations; and renewed attention to asymmetries in power amongst participants engaging in new approaches, methodologies, and processes of co-production'. 182 Temper and her co-authors have thus explored scholarly archetypes in order 'to prompt an ongoing conversation, inviting us to consider how we see our scientific practice, our engagement with other agents within the process of research, how values are reflected in the work we do, and how we sense that research leads to social and political change and transformation'. 183 Confining ourselves here to the legal sphere and global environmental law, we will draw inspiration from Walker and sketch a typology of global (environmental) lawyers to explore their strengths, weaknesses and blind spots. 184 Our argument is that selfidentifying with one or more such roles and attitudes may help us to analyze and understand how global environmental law phenomena are influenced by scholars, both individually and collectively, as they operate in different roles of legal expertise, contributing to the making, interpretation, application, enforcement, and diffusion of global environmental law. All too often, environmental law scholars do not explicitly interrogate in their own scholarly work their contributions to international lawmaking as advisers to governments, legal officers within international organizations, international negotiators, litigators, adjudicators, or consultants in legal advisory projects; 185 nor do they always ask whether the various forms of norm diffusion in which they are involved are inclusive or exclusive of marginalized voices. In other words, one of the missed opportunities for environmental lawyers in not engaging more closely with the global law debate is the ability to contribute to a self-reflexive conversation with other epistemic communities, such as global justice scholars and environmental justice scholars, 186 as a way to enrich traditional approaches to legal analysis and existing legal theories.
As Hey has argued in her reflection on global environmental law: Unless more equal participation of developing states, and where relevant nonstate actors from developing states, is attained at the global level of decision-making, there will be fundamental disagreement about the aims of global environmental law, which will not be regarded as a system of law that meets standards of justice, or serves to protect the environment. 187 According to Walkerwho has aptly described three typologies of the inclination of legal scholars towards justiceglobal law scholars more generally have not sufficiently engaged with global justice scholarship. He speaks of pragmatist legal scholars who are focused on the technicalities of the law and are blind, detached or impatient with 'wider questions regarding the causes, manifestations and consequences of global justice and injustice'. 188 This approach could be helpful in discovering, through interpretation of the minute details of the law and considerations of mutual supportiveness, implicit choices and opportunities related to justice. 189 However, pragmatist lawyers risk becoming hostage to a 'narrowly entrenched legalism' 190 and never putting their skills to the service of a justice-driven legal analysis. A second type of lawyer is represented by idealists, who believe that law is or can be a 'deep and (relatively) autonomous steering mechanism for other global social and economic forces' and focus their work on imagining new legal approaches or reinterpreting existing legal rules in ways that are geared towards addressing power imbalances and sources of injustice. These lawyers, in turn, run the risk of being caught in 'naïve or hubristic utopianism', 191 and of therefore being unable to put forward arguments that can be considered as technically solid as those of the pragmatic law scholars, or defensible from the viewpoint of critical legal scholars. The third type of lawyer he identifies is the radical critic who sees law as an 'instrument for larger social and economic forces tending towards global injustice' 192 and provides an incredibly helpful critique of the ways in which law comes to be constructed as a result, and to the service, of more powerful actors and interests, which is often overlooked by pragmatist and idealist legal scholars. This third group of lawyers has its own blind spotnamely, the tendency to abandon themselves to, or content themselves with, structural fatalism. 193 In addition, Mattei has highlighted that critical legal scholars can themselves often be 'powerful academic superstars from elite institutions that reproduce academic hierarchies', and who risk dissociating themselves from underlying political concerns and overlook 'the tensions and nuances in mainstream scholars' work'. 194 According to Mattei, therefore, this may result in a highly theoretically sophisticated caricature that is carried out for its own sake, is 'dangerously selfindulgent', and tends to ignore the work of non-affiliated scholars even when it may be fully aligned with a counter-hegemonic agenda. 195 Self-identifying as a representative of one or more of these attitudes and establishing a collaborative conversation with colleagues who espouse different attitudes can serve to nurture a culture of explicit and accountable discussion of scholars' biases and blind spots. Such biases and blind spots derive from professional experience, institutional culture and status, and the participation in epistemic networks that are increasingly recognized to be key determinants of international environmental law as a transnational and global legal field, 196 rather than an inherently universal and cosmopolitan one. 197 This exercise can help legal scholars to become more open to acknowledging and engaging with power asymmetries deriving from legal education, professional experiences, and epistemic networks that lead to 'different patterns of diffusion and knowledge' as a result of, inter alia, the multiple roles that international (environmental) lawyers play (advocates before international or national courts, advisers to governments or NGOs at the national or international level, and so on) and their multiple spheres of influence. 198 This would also serve to acknowledge and make an object of study the 'distinct insights' of different legal scholars who are engaged in alternative forms of practiceand competition among themselvesto influence international lawmaking and interpretation on the basis of their legal diversity. 199 This argument, emerging from Roberts' research into the national characteristics of international lawyers, is echoed in Walker's argument about global lawyers as 'symbolic entrepreneurs of the legal world' who, through 'globally resonant legal doctrine and practices', are involved in 'persuasive adaptation' and therefore contribute to the progressive development of global law. 200 It also resonates with the note of caution that global environmental lawyers may also be inadvertent or strategic norm entrepreneurs, and need to reflect carefully on the research ethics dimensions of their work. 201 This distinction provides a helpful basis not only for individual global environmental law scholars to be more open and accountable in their own work, but also for developing an argument that through a collaborative approach and open dialogue differently minded and trained scholars are together better able to analyze the current (and speculatively explore the future) capacity of global environmental law to cater for global environmental justice. Such a collaborative approach can also prove to be necessary for discussing normativity and legitimacy of global environmental law phenomena. Each of the three global lawyers is limited in his or her contribution, but working together they can help each other to identify, understand, and overcome their respective blind spots and develop a more solid line of investigation of global (environmental) law and global justice that draws on the strengths of each of the individual approaches. 202 Critical legal scholars can support other lawyers with their 'systematic attempt to include both the dimension of power and a theory of domination, and the relentless questioning of the "dark sides" of apparently emancipatory and progressive agendas' in law, as well as 'empowering alternative voices'. 203 In turn, pragmatic lawyers can support critical lawyers in fully taking into account the actual nuances of the law, and can support idealist lawyers in anchoring their arguments in existing details of the law or actual workings of it. For their part, idealist lawyers can support both critical and pragmatic legal scholars to move beyond a negative critique or technicist analysis towards the development of a constructive proposition that can systematically and selfreflexively consider the dark sides of law and accurately assess opportunities and constraints in its detailed workings.
For one of the authors of this article, the collaborative approach proposed aboveinformed by Walker's theoretical distinction, recent reflections on international law as a profession, 204 and Roberts' empirical researchmay provide a way to respond to, for instance, Klabbers' critique of 'international law as the law of international lawyers' as opposed to the law practised by states. 205 A collaborative self-reflexive approach could manage the risk of glossing over the reality and theoretical implications of global (environmental) lawyers playing several roles in the context of state practice, while addressing Klabbers' concerns about international legal research as highly competitive. 206 For that author, a collaborative self-reflexive process among global environmental lawyers may also provide a way to respond to the criticism of soft law and other deformalization processes 207 as undermining the internal logic and distinctiveness of the legal discipline, and instead harness their capacity to contribute a fresh reflection on the distinctive role of global environmental law in the context of global and environmental justice scholarship. 208 The other two authors remain less convinced of whether global environmental law as a collaborative self-reflexive approach can fully address concerns about normativity and legitimacy, and see the locus of such efforts in a process of more inclusive deliberation as well as participatory rights and guarantees. This raises the question whether global environmental law research projects may also need to factor in inclusive deliberation (as part of transdisciplinarity) as well as participatory rights and guarantees. 209 A continued dialogue among the three authors may help to further explore these questions moving forward.

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With this article, we have sought to offer a survey of global law scholarship, and show how it currently remains a heterogeneous, yet substantively ambitious project to reconcile legal scholarship with the myriad kaleidoscopic phenomena referred to under the label of globalization. Despite conceptual ambiguities, global law is marked by certain common narratives, such as the preoccupation with public authority beyond the state and a shared sense that the forces of globalization are so profound that they are bringing about a fundamental shift in the very idea of law. What that shift will ultimately render, however, remains unclear for now; the global law project, in other words, is an unfinished one, its vision yet to be determined.
Our analysis then proceeded to review the literature on global environmental law, situating it within the broader context of global law scholarship. Here, too, we affirm a lack of terminological consistency and a concern with the limitations of traditional categories of lawmaking and application, in this case in the area of environmental protection. Like the global law project, it remains unfinished; yet we go further and identify an unfulfilled potential: to engage more fully with the foundational questions raised by global law scholars from a theoretical perspective, and also to explore and deploy advances in environmental law methodologyfor instance, by drawing on comparative approaches to environmental law and harnessing empirical research methods.
Our analysis also confirms that global law remains, to some extent, a descriptive endeavour, focused on recording observed trends in global governance and offering causal explanations. Much of Walker's elegant systematization of global law is, for instance, a mapping exercise that traces patterns in evolving discourses about global normative activity. But Walker's work, as well as our analysis, also shows that the diverse landscape of global law harbours various strands that amount to a more activist agenda, aspiring to a jurisgenerative and transformational role of global law 208 Morgera is collaborating with environmental justice scholars in the context of the UKRI GCRF One Ocean Hub (n. 206 above). For a reflection from an international law perspective, see S. Besson, 'International Legal Theory qua Practice of International Law', in d'Aspremont et al., n. 177 above, pp. 268-84. 209 The UKRI GCRF One Ocean Hub (n. 206 above) is also seeking to integrate transdisciplinarity (research codevelopment with holders of different knowledge systems and value systems) and a human rights-based approach to externally funded research.
scholarship. We have thus discussed both considerable risk and considerable promise in global environmental law scholarship: a risk of enabling or strengthening channels of authority that lack legitimacy and accountability, or reflect elitist and hegemonic worldviews; and a promise to expand the breadth and depth of voices reflected in the creation and application of environmental norms, strengthening rather than undermining their legitimacy. Returning from the transformational potential of global environmental law in the external world to its impact on environmental law scholarship and discourse, we concluded by arguing that the most immediate benefit it offers may be the mirror it holds up to us as a scholarly community, forcing us to considerand potentially revisehow we approach the subject matter of our profession; shining a new light on our biases and blind spots, and casting in greater relief how our own work shapes and influences the ongoing evolution of environmental law. We drew on a proposed typology of scholarly identities and attitudes within global (environmental) law to encourage greater dialogue and collaboration among differently minded scholars to support one another in identifying, understanding and overcoming respective blind spots, and drawing on the strengths of one another to develop a more solid line of investigation at the intersection of global (environmental) law and global justice. We also underscored the need for global environmental law scholars to engage with altogether different epistemic communities, something that we believe can enable a more inclusive and self-reflexive approach to the evolving project of global environmental law.
Vibrant and, at times, perplexing global environmental law stands to remain an intriguing area of continued research. The centrifugal forces which prompted the emergence of global law scholarship in the first place show no signs of abating, and hence lawyersincluding environmental lawyerswill continue to face questions that traditional understandings of lawmaking and application struggle to answer. We can be hopeful that global environmental law, as an unfinished project, will both enrich our understanding of environmental law and our role therein, helping to close, rather than expand, the legitimacy gap from which environmental governance has often suffered. However, any project of this scope also carries some risk. It is our collective responsibility as scholars of environmental law to ensure that we leverage the positive potential of the global law project without inviting new biases or supplanting the law with our own contingent interests and values.