EnviReform:
Strengthening Canada's Environmental Community through International Regime Reform:
Exploring Social Cohesion in a Globalizing Era | |
WHATS NEW:
G20 Accountability: The G20 Summit’s Compliance Record on Climate Change and Energy, 2008 to 2011, Caroline Bracht, December 4, 2011
G8 Climate Accountability, 1975-2011, by John Kirton, Jenilee Guebert and Caroline Bracht, December 2, 2011
New papers by John Kirton, "NAFTA for the Next Generation: Lessons Learned and
Challenges Ahead" and "NAFTA Dispute Settlement Mechanisms: An Overview".
More info
Oral History of the CEC More info
ARTICLE: "The Implications of the 2004 American Elections for the Canada-U.S. Trade Relationship" by Lida Preyma Search by Sections for Keyword SEARCH |
Professor Chris Tollefson is a Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law of the University of Victoria. He is the founder and Executive Director of the University of Victoria's Environmental Law Centre, home of the only clinical program in public interest environmental law in Canada. He has served on the board of the Sierra Legal Defence Fund since 1993, and was president from 1998 to 2001. The Sierra Legal Defence Fund and LEAD are partner institutions of the "Strengthening Canada's Environmental Community through International Regime Reform" (the EnviReform project) at the University of Toronto. Professor Tollefson's recent publications include The Wealth of Forests: Markets, Regulation and Sustainable Forestry (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1998) and cleanair.ca: a citizen's action guide (Toronto: Sierra Legal Defence Fund, 2000). He is currently working on a manuscript funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada that considers the influence of eco-certification on forest policy in British Columbia. A member of Canada's NAAEC National Advisory Committee, Professor Tollefson is a co-investigator in the EnviReform project at the University of Toronto.
EnviReform gratefully acknowledges the funding of SSHRC (Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada)
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