20821 - ESG LAW
Department of Law
MIRIAM ALLENA
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
- The redefinition of the role of government and business to address social and environmental challenges: 'positive obligations' of corporations towards the protection of the environment
- The redefinition of the corporate purpose and the future of capitalism
- From this perspective, the following main topics will be addressed:
- The characteristics of environmental law
- Techniques for environmental management: command and control, market tools, voluntary tools and the role of self-regulation
- Principles of European Environmental Law (i.e. sustainable development, the precautionary principle, the prevention principle; the source principle; the polluter pays principle)
- Regulation of specific sectors (ex. climate change, nature protection, control of industrial emissions, technological risk regulation)
- the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), the Taxonomy Regulation and the EU Commission proposal for a directive on corporate sustainability due diligence
- Green antitrust law
- Green IP Law
- Environmental liability and climate litigation
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Understand the complex nature of ESG issues and the multiple ways in which law applies to and engages with them.
- Understand the impact of "corporate purpose" on corporate governance and corporate liability
- Gain a deeper legal understanding of EU environmental principles and the concept of sustainable development
- Analyse the various regulatory strategies involved in dealing with environmental problems and the role of the key actors involved in implementing such strategies within the EU
- Gain a solid understanding of EU legal frameworks that apply to key environmental problems, including climate change, protection of the environmental media (climate change, air pollution, technological risk regulation, nature protection and the control of industrial emissions.
- Foster team work, critical and analytical analysis and problem solving (especially through case studies and class projects)
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Critically assess the broader articulation of the role of companies and their capability to address harms to society or the environment
- Be aware of relevant stakeholders, their preferences, and the path by which they can influence EU environmental law.
- Locate, read, and analyze EU and domestic environmental law and case law
- Foster team work, critical and analytical analysis as well as problem solving (through case studies and class projects).
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Case studies /Incidents (traditional, online)
- Group assignments
DETAILS
Teaching method is based on active learning and includes lectures and several case studies (as an aid to understanding). Students are expected to ensure regular class attendance (at least 75%) and to actively participate in class discussions and teamwork. Slides and other materials are made available to students beforehand in order to facilitate note taking.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING STUDENTS
- Attending students sit a written open book exam consisting of one question (an hypothetical scenario the solution to which requires familiarity with, and mastery of, the course materials) to be answered in 75 minutes. This counts as 80% of the marks. Students can sit this kind of exam only in the first two exam dates.
- Students must also work in-group (max. 6 students per group) to prepare a presentation on a specific topic directly relevant to ESG law as it applies in the European Union. The group assignment evaluation counts 20% of the marks.
- The final exam aims to assess the solid understanding of the EU legal framework that applies to key ESG problems.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Final written exam consisting of 3 open questions and 8 multiple choice questions to be answered in 60 minutes.
This counts as 100% of the mark.
The final exam aims to assess the solid understanding of the complex nature of current social and environmental challenges, the multiple ways in which government and business engages with them, as well as to critically assess the broader articulation of the role of companies and their capability to address harms to society or the environment.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
J. van Zeben, A. Rowell, A guide to EU environmental law, 2020, University of California Press, ISBN-10 0520295226.
Other materials and selected readings will be indicated at the beginning of the course and will be available online.
Notes will be provided with slides.