Where the top down approach focused on legally binding emissions targets and timetables has had no appreciable effect on global emissions, a bottom up bilateral and
multilateral approach focused on real commitments to put clean energy infrastructure in the ground might begin to move the needle.
Not exact matches
As Julius Nyerere, president of Tanzania, pointed out in a speech at the recent World Conference on Agrarian Reform and Rural Development, held in Rome, the officials of
multilateral and some national aid agencies are turning to a «basic needs»
approach — i.e., shifting to rural development as the major
focus for aid.
Notwithstanding its narrow
focus, the Mauritius Convention pursues a systematic reform
approach and confronts the fragmented structure of the international investment regime by proposing a legal principle (transparency) that applies to all existing bilateral, regional, and
multilateral investment treaties, and in all available arbitral fora.