Abstract

AbstractCases involving climate change have been litigated in the courts for some time, but new directions and trends have started to emerge. While the majority of climate litigation has occurred in the United States and other developed countries, cases in the Global South are growing both in terms of quantity and in the quality of their strategies and regulatory outcomes. However, so far climate litigation in the Global South has received scant attention from the literature. We argue that climate litigation in the Global South opens up avenues for progress in addressing climate change in highly vulnerable countries. We first highlight some of the capacity constraints experienced in Global South countries to provide context for the emerging trend of strategic climate litigation in the area. In spite of significant constraints experienced, the strategies adopted by litigants push the climate litigation agenda forward as a result of their outward-looking objective of combating ongoing environmental degradation, and, on a doctrinal level, the way in which they link climate change and human rights. Bearing in mind the limitations resulting from the selective nature of the cases examined, we draw upon Legal Opportunity Structures (LOS) approaches and identify two reasons for innovative cases and outcomes in Global South strategic climate litigation: (i) how litigants are either overcoming or using procedural requirements for access to environmental justice, and (ii) the existence of progressive legislative and judicial approaches to climate change. The strategies and outcomes from these judicial approaches in the Global South might be able to contribute to the further development of transnational climate change litigation.

Highlights

  • Transnational Environmental Law overcoming or using procedural requirements for access to environmental justice, and (ii) the existence of progressive legislative and judicial approaches to climate change

  • While the majority of climate litigation has occurred in the United States and other developed countries, cases in the Global South are growing both in terms of quantity and in the quality of their strategies and regulatory outcomes

  • We argue that climate litigation in the Global South opens up avenues for progress in addressing climate change in highly vulnerable countries

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Summary

Combating Ongoing Environmental Degradation

A number of landmark strategic climate litigation cases in the Global North are targeted at driving governmental ambition on climate change. United States the plaintiffs claim that governmental failure to take action on climate change will deprive future generations of the same protection provided to previous generations.[46] While the case has faced significant procedural hurdles regarding standing,[47] if successful it could direct the US government to develop a plan to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.[48] Urgenda and Juliana have inspired other cases, including a lawsuit brought by Friends of the Irish Environment against the Irish government for alleged failure to mitigate climate change, and a legal challenge brought by the NGO ENvironnement JEUnesse against the Canadian government for alleged failure to protect the fundamental rights of young people.[49] in France four NGOs have taken a first step towards a lawsuit against the state by submitting a formal notice to the French Prime Minister and 12 members of the government for their inadequate efforts to effectively tackle climate change, in violation of a statutory duty to act.[50] In contrast to this approach, rather than requesting direct regulatory action on climate change by governments, plaintiffs in the Global South take a more indirect route. Decades through various legal and non-legal strategies,[57] but this particular case is being framed in terms of its climate impacts and brought as a climate lawsuit.[58]

Vulnerability and Rights-based Claims in the Global South
Access to Justice
Findings
Progressive Legislation and Judicial Approaches
Full Text
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