Implications of the Copenhagen Accord for Global Climate Governance

Climate advocates are increasingly raising specific climate change concerns before domestic courts, human rights tribunals, international commissions and other national and international decisionmaking bodies. Win or lose, these litigation strategies are significantly changing and enhancing the publ...

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Main Author: Hunter, David
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital Commons @ American University Washington College of Law 2010
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Online Access:https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/peel_faculty/3
https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/context/peel_faculty/article/1002/viewcontent/viewcontent.cgi
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spelling ftamericuniwashl:oai:digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu:peel_faculty-1002 2023-11-12T04:19:45+01:00 Implications of the Copenhagen Accord for Global Climate Governance Hunter, David 2010-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/peel_faculty/3 https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/context/peel_faculty/article/1002/viewcontent/viewcontent.cgi unknown Digital Commons @ American University Washington College of Law https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/peel_faculty/3 https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/context/peel_faculty/article/1002/viewcontent/viewcontent.cgi PEEL Faculty Scholarship agricultural law constitutional law law of the sea food and drug law energy law health law and policy intellectual property law litigation environmental law property law human rights law water law natural resources law public law and legal theory text 2010 ftamericuniwashl 2023-10-15T16:32:46Z Climate advocates are increasingly raising specific climate change concerns before domestic courts, human rights tribunals, international commissions and other national and international decisionmaking bodies. Win or lose, these litigation strategies are significantly changing and enhancing the public dialogue around climate change. This article discusses the awareness-building impacts of climate litigation as well as related impacts such strategies may have on the development of climate law and policy. The article argues that litigation's focus on specific victims facing immediate threats from climate change has increased the political will to address climate change both internationally and nationally. It has also shifted the debate towards questions of compensation and adaptation, and has brought new and democratic voices to the climate policy debate. As a result, climate litigation is leaving an important imprint on climate policy regardless of whether a tort action in the United States or the Inuit human rights claims, for example, ultimately prevail - and as demonstrated by the recent US Supreme Court decision in Massachusetts v. EPA, some climate claims will prevail, setting important precedents for the future direction of climate law and policy. Text inuit Digital Commons @ American University Washington College of Law
institution Open Polar
collection Digital Commons @ American University Washington College of Law
op_collection_id ftamericuniwashl
language unknown
topic agricultural law
constitutional law
law of the sea
food and drug law
energy law
health law and policy
intellectual property law
litigation
environmental law
property law
human rights law
water law
natural resources law
public law and legal theory
spellingShingle agricultural law
constitutional law
law of the sea
food and drug law
energy law
health law and policy
intellectual property law
litigation
environmental law
property law
human rights law
water law
natural resources law
public law and legal theory
Hunter, David
Implications of the Copenhagen Accord for Global Climate Governance
topic_facet agricultural law
constitutional law
law of the sea
food and drug law
energy law
health law and policy
intellectual property law
litigation
environmental law
property law
human rights law
water law
natural resources law
public law and legal theory
description Climate advocates are increasingly raising specific climate change concerns before domestic courts, human rights tribunals, international commissions and other national and international decisionmaking bodies. Win or lose, these litigation strategies are significantly changing and enhancing the public dialogue around climate change. This article discusses the awareness-building impacts of climate litigation as well as related impacts such strategies may have on the development of climate law and policy. The article argues that litigation's focus on specific victims facing immediate threats from climate change has increased the political will to address climate change both internationally and nationally. It has also shifted the debate towards questions of compensation and adaptation, and has brought new and democratic voices to the climate policy debate. As a result, climate litigation is leaving an important imprint on climate policy regardless of whether a tort action in the United States or the Inuit human rights claims, for example, ultimately prevail - and as demonstrated by the recent US Supreme Court decision in Massachusetts v. EPA, some climate claims will prevail, setting important precedents for the future direction of climate law and policy.
format Text
author Hunter, David
author_facet Hunter, David
author_sort Hunter, David
title Implications of the Copenhagen Accord for Global Climate Governance
title_short Implications of the Copenhagen Accord for Global Climate Governance
title_full Implications of the Copenhagen Accord for Global Climate Governance
title_fullStr Implications of the Copenhagen Accord for Global Climate Governance
title_full_unstemmed Implications of the Copenhagen Accord for Global Climate Governance
title_sort implications of the copenhagen accord for global climate governance
publisher Digital Commons @ American University Washington College of Law
publishDate 2010
url https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/peel_faculty/3
https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/context/peel_faculty/article/1002/viewcontent/viewcontent.cgi
genre inuit
genre_facet inuit
op_source PEEL Faculty Scholarship
op_relation https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/peel_faculty/3
https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/context/peel_faculty/article/1002/viewcontent/viewcontent.cgi
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