This chapter offers a comprehensive legal and ethical analysis of Qatar’s environmental governance system, examining the interplay between international, regional, and domestic frameworks. It highlights Qatar’s progressive incorporation of global environmental treaties—including the UNFCCC, CBD, and Paris Agreement—into national strategies such as the Qatar National Vision 2030 and the National Environment and Climate Change Strategy. The chapter critically assesses Qatar’s mixed approach to enforcement—ranging from command-and-control and market-based mechanisms to behavioral “green nudges”—and identifies key gaps in legal coordination, biodiversity protection, and regulatory enforcement. A central contribution of the chapter is its integration of Islamic environmental ethics into legal discourse, exploring the potential of Quranic principles such as tawhid (unity), khalifa (stewardship), and mīzān (balance) to inform interspecies rights and ecocentric policy design. Drawing on the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan, it outlines opportunities to strengthen nature conservation through the Islamic legal tradition, biodiversity offsetting, and improved EIA practices. The chapter concludes with forward-looking policy recommendations that bridge legal theory and implementation, emphasizing the need for institutional reform, inclusive governance, and ethical coherence to enable an effective, theologically grounded, and legally robust response to biodiversity loss and climate change in Qatar.

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International and National Environmental Laws and Ethics

  • E. Athwal,
  • G. Dimitropoulos,
  • D. Olawuyi,
  • A. S. Weber,
  • R. Al-Sehlawi,
  • A. M. Dheen Mohamed,
  • A. Amato,
  • A. D. Chatziefthimiou

摘要

This chapter offers a comprehensive legal and ethical analysis of Qatar’s environmental governance system, examining the interplay between international, regional, and domestic frameworks. It highlights Qatar’s progressive incorporation of global environmental treaties—including the UNFCCC, CBD, and Paris Agreement—into national strategies such as the Qatar National Vision 2030 and the National Environment and Climate Change Strategy. The chapter critically assesses Qatar’s mixed approach to enforcement—ranging from command-and-control and market-based mechanisms to behavioral “green nudges”—and identifies key gaps in legal coordination, biodiversity protection, and regulatory enforcement. A central contribution of the chapter is its integration of Islamic environmental ethics into legal discourse, exploring the potential of Quranic principles such as tawhid (unity), khalifa (stewardship), and mīzān (balance) to inform interspecies rights and ecocentric policy design. Drawing on the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan, it outlines opportunities to strengthen nature conservation through the Islamic legal tradition, biodiversity offsetting, and improved EIA practices. The chapter concludes with forward-looking policy recommendations that bridge legal theory and implementation, emphasizing the need for institutional reform, inclusive governance, and ethical coherence to enable an effective, theologically grounded, and legally robust response to biodiversity loss and climate change in Qatar.