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Routledge Handbook of Human Rights and Climate Governance Routledge Environment and Sustainability Handbooks Series

Langue : Anglais
Couverture de l’ouvrage Routledge Handbook of Human Rights and Climate Governance

Over the last decade, the world has increasingly grappled with the complex linkages emerging between efforts to combat climate change and to protect human rights around the world. The Paris Climate Agreement adopted in December 2015 recognized the necessity for governments to take into consideration their human rights obligations when taking climate action. However, important gaps remain in understanding how human rights can be used in practice to develop and implement effective and equitable solutions to climate change at multiple levels of governance.

This book brings together leading scholars and practitioners to offer a timely and comprehensive analysis of the opportunities and challenges for integrating human rights in diverse areas and forms of global climate governance. The first half of the book explores how human rights principles and obligations can be used to reconceive climate governance and shape responses to particular aspects of climate change. The second half of the book identifies lessons in the integration of human rights in climate advocacy and governance and sets out future directions in this burgeoning domain.

Featuring a diverse range of contributors and case studies, this Handbook will be an essential resource for students, scholars, practitioners and policy makers with an interest in climate law and governance, human rights and international environmental law.

Foreword bySheila Watt-Cloutier Part I Conceptual Foundations 1. Integrating Human Rights in Global Climate Governance: An Introduction 2. Analysing Rights Discourses in the International Climate Regime 3. Climate Change and Human Rights: Fragmentation, Interplay and Institutional Linkages 4. Local Rights Claims in International Negotiations: Transnational Human Rights Networks at the Climate Conferences 5. Rights, Representation and Recognition: Practicing Advocacy for Women and Indigenous Peoples in UN Climate Negotiations Part II International Framework 6. State Responsibility for Human Rights Violations Associated with Climate Change 7. Climate change impacts: human rights in climate adaptation and loss and damage 8. Human Rights and Climate Displacement and Migration 9. Climate Change under Regional Human Rights Systems 10. From Copenhagen to Paris at the UN Human Rights Council: when climate change became a human rights issue Part III. Early Lessons 11. Look before you Jump: Assessing the Potential Influence of the Human Rights Bandwagon on Domestic Climate Policy 12. Rights, Justice, and REDD+: Lessons from Climate Advocacy and Early Implementation in the Amazon Basin 13. Protecting Indigenous Peoples’ Land Rights in Global Climate Governance 14. The Indigenous Rights Framework and Climate Change 15. Using the Paris Agreement's Ambition Ratcheting Mechanisms to Expose Insufficient Protection of Human Rights in Formulating National Climate Policies Part IV. Stakeholder Perspectives 16. From Marrakesh to Marrakesh: the rise of gender equality in the global climate governance and climate action 17. Energy Justice: The intersection of Human Rights and Climate Justice 18. Overlooked and undermined: child rights and climate change 19. Human rights, differentiated responsibilities? Advancing equity and human rights in the Climate Change Regime 20. Climate Justice and Human Rights 21. Securing Workers’ Rights in the Transition to a Low-carbon World: The Just Transition Concept and its Evolution Part V. Regional Case Studies 22. 'There is No Time Left': Climate Change, Environmental Threats, and Human Rights in Turkana County, Kenya 23. Human Rights and Climate Change: Focusing on South Asia 24. Climate Change and the European Court of Human Rights: Future Potentials 25. Are Europeans equal with regard to the health impact of climate change? 26. Integrating a human rights-based approach to address climate change impacts in Latin America: case studies from Bolivia and Peru 27. Connecting Human Rights and Short-Lived Climate Pollutants: The Arctic Angle 28. Climate change and human rights in the Commonwealth Caribbean: case studies of The Bahamas and Trinidad and Tobago Part VI. Future Directions 29. Mobilizing Human Rights to Combat Climate Change through Litigation 30. Human Rights and Land-Based Carbon Mitigation 31. Climate Change: Human Rights and Private Remedies32. Towards Responsible Renewable Energy: Assessing 50 wind and hydropower companies’ human rights policies in the context of rising allegations of abuse 33. Intersectionalities, human rights, and climate change: emerging linkages in the practice of the UN human rights monitoring system34. Climate Change, Human Rights, and Divestment

Postgraduate and Undergraduate

Sébastien Duyck is a Senior Attorney at the Center for International Environmental Law, USA, and an affiliated researcher at the Northern Institute for Environmental and Minority Law / Arctic Centre, University of Lapland, Finland.

Sébastien Jodoin is an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Law at McGill University, Canada, and an Associate Member of the McGill School of Environment.

Alyssa Johl is a founding member of the Climate Rights Collective. She previously served as a Senior Attorney at the Center for International Environmental Law, USA.

Date de parution :

17.4x24.6 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).

60,02 €

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Date de parution :

17.4x24.6 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).

331,56 €

Ajouter au panier

Thèmes de Routledge Handbook of Human Rights and Climate Governance :

Mots-clés :

CDM Project; Climate Displacement; Cop21; Human Rights; Climate Change; climate law; Special Procedures Mandate Holders; climate governance; Disaster Risk Reduction; Environmental policy; Paris Agreement; international environmental law; Nationally Determined Contributions; climate advocacy; Human Rights Obligations; Sébastien Duyck; Climate Justice; Sébastien Jodoin; Global Climate Governance; Alyssa Johl; Reduce GHG Emission; climate displacment; Cancun Agreements; climate migration; Cop Decision; REDD+; Climate Justice Movement; Black Carbon Emissions; Indigenous Rights; Civil Society; UNFCCC; International Human Rights Law; UNFCCC Parti; UNFCCC Process; Katherine Lofts; UNFCCC’s Secretariat; Annalisa Savaresi; Global GHG Emission; Andrea Schapper; SLCP; Linda Wallbott; Environmental Issues; Margaretha Wewerinke-Singh; Sven Harmeling; Alice Thomas; Sumudu Anopama Atapattu; Felix Kirchmeier; Yves Lador; Rosine Faucher; Deborah Delgado Pugley; Ademola Oluborode Jegede; Ben Powless; Donald A; Brown; Anne Barre; Irene Dankelman; Anke Stock; Eleanor Blomstrom; Bridget Burns; Allison Silverman; Joni Pegram; Gita Parihar; Kate Dooley; Doreen Stabinsky; Edouard Morena; Katharina Rall; Felix Horne; Vositha Wijenayake; Heta Heiskanen; Isabell Büschel; Andrea Rodriguez; María José Veramendi Villa; Sabaa A; Khan; Lisa Benjamin; Rueanna Haynes; Abby Rubinson Vollmer; Nathalie Chalifour; Heather Mcleod-Kilmurray; Lynda M; Collins; Eniko Horvath; Kasumi Maeda; Joanna Bourke Martignoni; Basil Ugochukwu