CORE Global Environmental Governance: 1972 to 1992
The Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment opened on 5 June 1972 and converted environmental harm from a local nuisance into an international governance issue. It produced the Stockholm Declaration, an action plan for the human environment and the institutional setting that led to UNEP. The date 5 June became World Environment Day, so this event connects treaty chronology, environmental awareness and institutional origin. Rio Earth Summit 1992 widened the frame. At Rio de Janeiro, governments linked environment with development, Agenda 21, the UNFCCC climate process and the CBD biodiversity process. The sequence matters because later environmental issues are not isolated: air pollution, hazardous waste, biodiversity loss and climate change all sit inside this governance chain. Rajasthan gives the chronology a field surface through Sambhar Lake environmental stress. The saline wetland is not a climate treaty, but bird mortality, water stress and extraction pressure show why global principles need local enforcement. In state questions, Sambhar Lake, the Aravalli range and urban waste around Jaipur work as Rajasthan cases for the same governance logic: public resources need rules, monitoring and liability. The important idea is scale. Stockholm speaks in principles such as prevention, state responsibility and cooperation; Rio converts cooperation into sustainable-development instruments; local agencies then convert instruments into permits, standards and restoration orders. Without that scale movement, environmental governance remains a declaration. With it, an issue can move from a conference text to a plastic rule, a wetland order or a pollution-board consent condition. The same chronology also separates first-generation issues from later ones. First-generation issues were pollution, sanitation and resource depletion; later questions added climate, biodiversity, genetic resources, hazardous trade and lifestyle. This is why one topic needs both treaty dates and domestic operational rules.
