This symposium’s issue on ‘Climate Justice and International Environmental Law: Rethinking the North–South Divide’ asks contributors to explore the intersection between law and emerging ideas of climate justice, and how international environmental law is shaped by and in turn reshapes (or fixates, or interrogates) our understandings of the North–South divide. In relation to the former, the author posits that there appears to be a profound disconnect between the law and the politics of climate change, one that reflects a broader disconnect between those who view the challenge posed by climate change through an ethical lens, and those who see it in pragmatic terms. In relation to the latter, she considers the various arguments as to why we ne...
International audienceClimate change poses immense problems of intergenerational, intragenerational ...
This book examines the ways in which the conflicting perspectives and priorities of the global North...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...
This symposium’s issue on ‘Climate Justice and International Environmental Law: Rethinking the North...
Practitioners occasionally demure that the current academic literature on climate justice is overly ...
The recent high-level emergence of ‘climate justice’ in the normative and policy discourse addressin...
This study examines the question: Is the theory of environmental justice, as has been used at the na...
[Abstract]: Contemporary debates surrounding global commons issues and their amelioration are inextr...
Justice globalism, as an ideological field, emerged to prominence from 2001 with the World Social Fo...
Abstract State-centric law appears ill equipped to meet human rights’ emancipatory promise in an inc...
Climate change presents profound justice dilemmas because of its asymmetrical costs and benefits. T...
Legal principles legitimise ubiquitous social values. They make certain social norms lawful and legi...
A growing body of research suggests that the global conception of climate change is increasingly tak...
Climate law has often been framed as a component of environmental law. Under this conception, enviro...
International audienceClimate change poses immense problems of intergenerational, intragenerational ...
This book examines the ways in which the conflicting perspectives and priorities of the global North...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...
This symposium’s issue on ‘Climate Justice and International Environmental Law: Rethinking the North...
Practitioners occasionally demure that the current academic literature on climate justice is overly ...
The recent high-level emergence of ‘climate justice’ in the normative and policy discourse addressin...
This study examines the question: Is the theory of environmental justice, as has been used at the na...
[Abstract]: Contemporary debates surrounding global commons issues and their amelioration are inextr...
Justice globalism, as an ideological field, emerged to prominence from 2001 with the World Social Fo...
Abstract State-centric law appears ill equipped to meet human rights’ emancipatory promise in an inc...
Climate change presents profound justice dilemmas because of its asymmetrical costs and benefits. T...
Legal principles legitimise ubiquitous social values. They make certain social norms lawful and legi...
A growing body of research suggests that the global conception of climate change is increasingly tak...
Climate law has often been framed as a component of environmental law. Under this conception, enviro...
International audienceClimate change poses immense problems of intergenerational, intragenerational ...
This book examines the ways in which the conflicting perspectives and priorities of the global North...
Calls for climate justice abound as evidence accumulates of the growing social and environmental inj...