Competences in environmental protection
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24965/reala.vi220.8340Keywords:
Environmental Law, articles 149.1.23 and 148.1.9 CE, Stockholm Charter, environmental impact, Protection of Natural Areas, Comparative LawAbstract
SUMMARY: I. INTRODUCTION. - II. THE REGULATION ON THE ENVIRONMENT: 1. ATMOSPHERE. 2. WATERS. 3. MARITIME WATERS. 4. SOLID WASTE. 5. PROTECTION OF NATURAL SPACES. 6. PROTECTION OF THE GEO. - III. RECEPTION IN THE AUTONOMOUS COMMUNITIES OF THE TRANSFERRED COMPETENCES. - IV. OTHER TRANSFERABLE COMPETENCES. - V. SUBJECTS AND POWERS TRANSFERRED AND RESERVED. - VI. ASSESSMENT OF TRANSFERS. - VII TRANSFERABLE COMPETENCES. - VIII. CONSTITUTIONALIZATION OF THE RIGHT TO THE ENVIRONMENT. - IX. THE MUNICIPAL AUTONOMY VERSUS TUTORIAL INTERVENTIONS. - X. AUTONOMIC ADMINISTRATION AS AN ALTERNATIVE FOR COORDINATION AND UNIFICATION. - XI. THE COORDINATION AND UNIFICATION OF THE ENVIRONMENT IN COMPARATIVE LAW: 1. GERMAN FEDERAL REPUBLIC. 2. GREAT BRITAIN. 3. FRANCE. 4. UNITED STATES. 5. VENEZUELA. - XII. AUDIT OF ACTIVITIES. INTERVENTION TECHNIQUES: 1. PREVENTIVES. 2. REPRESSIVE. 3. STIMULATORS.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 1983 Revista de Estudios de la Administración Local y Autonómica

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.