Abstract State-centric law appears ill equipped to meet human rights’ emancipatory promise in an increasingly pluralistic, unequal world facing climate change. ‘Climate justice’ has become a counterpoint to hegemonic statist, neoliberal climate approaches. However, few studies address the confluence of competing norms (including rights), power relations and multiple actors in shaping, contesting and reinterpreting climate justice in specific contexts, despite burgeoning human rights and legal pluralism research. This article explores legal pluralism’s potential for understanding rights’ roles in climate justice through examining Norway. Legal pluralism reveals how Norwegian ‘translators’ vernacularise transnational climate justice aspects, ...
Despite growing concerns over climate change and the proliferation of national climate laws, global ...
Climate change challenges the resiliency and integrity of social and legal systems worldwide. ...
This symposium’s issue on ‘Climate Justice and International Environmental Law: Rethinking the North...
State-centric law appears ill equipped to meet human rights’ emancipatory promise in an increasingly...
Norwegian climate policy has stalled; it is fundamentally isolated from broader energy and economic ...
Climate change challenges human rights (HRs) "as the dominant language of justice." A HRs and climat...
Human rights are a powerful legal and rhetorical tool for guiding international systems. The introdu...
The recent high-level emergence of ‘climate justice’ in the normative and policy discourse addressin...
Climate change as well as climate policies can have adverse effects on the human rights of certain p...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...
While climate change has been framed as an environmental issue from the very beginning of United Nat...
Practitioners occasionally demure that the current academic literature on climate justice is overly ...
The problem of global climate changes has raised fundamental questions of justice in world politics ...
Justice globalism, as an ideological field, emerged to prominence from 2001 with the World Social Fo...
Climate change litigation is expanding at fast speed throughout various jurisdictions around the wor...
Despite growing concerns over climate change and the proliferation of national climate laws, global ...
Climate change challenges the resiliency and integrity of social and legal systems worldwide. ...
This symposium’s issue on ‘Climate Justice and International Environmental Law: Rethinking the North...
State-centric law appears ill equipped to meet human rights’ emancipatory promise in an increasingly...
Norwegian climate policy has stalled; it is fundamentally isolated from broader energy and economic ...
Climate change challenges human rights (HRs) "as the dominant language of justice." A HRs and climat...
Human rights are a powerful legal and rhetorical tool for guiding international systems. The introdu...
The recent high-level emergence of ‘climate justice’ in the normative and policy discourse addressin...
Climate change as well as climate policies can have adverse effects on the human rights of certain p...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...
While climate change has been framed as an environmental issue from the very beginning of United Nat...
Practitioners occasionally demure that the current academic literature on climate justice is overly ...
The problem of global climate changes has raised fundamental questions of justice in world politics ...
Justice globalism, as an ideological field, emerged to prominence from 2001 with the World Social Fo...
Climate change litigation is expanding at fast speed throughout various jurisdictions around the wor...
Despite growing concerns over climate change and the proliferation of national climate laws, global ...
Climate change challenges the resiliency and integrity of social and legal systems worldwide. ...
This symposium’s issue on ‘Climate Justice and International Environmental Law: Rethinking the North...