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E-grāmata: Human Rights Approaches to Climate Change: Challenges and Opportunities

(University of Wisconsin, USA)
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Despite the clear link between climate change and human rights with the potential for virtually all protected rights to be undermined as a result of climate change, its catastrophic impact on human beings was not really understood as a human rights issue until recently.

This book examines the link between climate change and human rights in a comprehensive manner. It looks at human rights approaches to climate change, including the jurisprudential bases for human rights and the environment, the theoretical framework governing human rights and the environment, and the different approaches to this including benchmarks. In addition to a discussion of human rights implications of international environmental law principles in the climate change regime, the book explores how the human rights framework can be used in relation to mitigation, adaption, and adjudication. Other chapters examine how vulnerable groups –women, indigenous peoples and climate "refugees" – would be disproportionately affected by climate change. The book then goes on to discuss a new category of people created by climate change, those who will be rendered stateless as a result of states disappearing and displaced by climate change, and whether human rights law can adequately address these emerging issues.

Foreword xiii
Acknowledgements xvii
About the author xix
Abbreviations xxi
Introduction: Framing the issues 1(12)
1 The multi-faceted nature of climate change
4(1)
2 The human dimension of climate change
5(1)
3 The theoretical framework
6(2)
4 Positive developments
8(1)
5 Overview of chapters
9(4)
PART I Legal aspects and human rights framework
13(140)
1 International legal framework governing climate change: A human rights assessment
15(22)
2 Prelude to UMFCCC
19(1)
2 Divisions within the global community
19(2)
3 The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
21(2)
4 Kyoto Protocol, 1997
23(1)
5 Post-Kyoto developments
24(11)
6 Conclusion
35(2)
2 Human rights approaches to environmental protection
37(31)
1 An overview of human rights
39(5)
2 Theoretical framework
44(3)
3 Different approaches to and jurisprudential bases for human rights and the environment
47(2)
4 Pros and cons of using a human rights framework for environmental issues
49(2)
5 Evolution of a right to environment under international law
51(11)
6 Extraterritorial dimension of human rights obligations
62(2)
7 Environment (climate) justice as a framework
64(2)
8 Conclusion
66(2)
3 Climate change and human rights: A justice issue?
68(32)
1 Introduction
68(1)
2 Link between climate change and human rights and the report of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
69(6)
3 Substantive and procedural rights at risk
75(11)
4 Identification of rights holders and duty bearers
86(2)
5 Procedural rights
88(1)
6 Extraterritorial dimension of human rights obligations and climate change
89(2)
7 Utility of a stand-alone right to a healthy environment
91(2)
8 Climate justice framework
93(5)
9 Challenges of using a human rights approach to climate change
98(2)
4 International environmental law principles and climate change: A rights and justice assessment
100(25)
1 Introduction
100(2)
2 Role of equity and fairness
102(5)
3 Principles of international environmental law in the climate regime
107(17)
4 Conclusion
124(1)
5 Mitigation and adaptation through a human rights lens
125(28)
1 Introduction
125(2)
2 Equity, justice and fairness
127(1)
3 Climate change mitigation
128(13)
4 Adaptation
141(9)
5 Conclusion
150(3)
PART II Human rights and vulnerable groups
153(66)
6 Climate-related migration and "climate refugees"
155(21)
1 Introduction
155(2)
2 Scale of the problem and projections of future refugees
157(2)
3 Human rights at risk
159(3)
4 What is in a name? Defining climate migrants
162(4)
5 What kind of protection is envisaged?
166(1)
6 Small island states and displacement
166(1)
7 Legal framework
167(5)
8 Possible legal framework based on human rights law
172(3)
9 Conclusion
175(1)
7 Forests, REDD and indigenous peoples
176(22)
1 Introduction
176(3)
2 From RED to REDD + via REDD
179(3)
3 Forest governance and human rights
182(2)
4 REDD and participatory rights
184(7)
5 What is FPIC?
191(2)
6 Case law
193(3)
7 Conclusion
196(2)
8 Women, climate change and inequality
198(21)
1 Women and climate vulnerability
199(2)
2 Theoretical framework: International human rights law and CEDAW
201(1)
3 UNFCCC and gender
202(7)
4 Women and climate change
209(7)
5 Conclusion
216(3)
PART III Human rights implications of international legal issues
219(79)
9 Small island states and their people
221(21)
1 Small island states, alliances and international action on climate change
223(4)
2 The tale of two SIDS: The Maldives and Tuvalu
227(3)
3 Challenges for international law
230(10)
4 Conclusion
240(2)
10 Extreme weather events, access to resources and conflict: Implications for international peace and security
242(24)
1 Human security and climate change
245(4)
2 Scarcity of resources, climate migration and conflict
249(5)
3 Climate migration
254(2)
4 Climate change as a security issue
256(4)
5 Extreme weather events and disaster reduction
260(4)
6 Conclusion
264(2)
11 Adjudicating climate change and human rights law
266(25)
1 Introduction
266(3)
2 Cases at international and regional levels
269(12)
3 Loss and damage mechanism
281(2)
4 Role of litigation
283(3)
5 Other possible options: Justice for small island states?
286(3)
6 Conclusion
289(2)
12 Climate change and human rights: Square pegs in round holes?
291(7)
Bibliography 298(14)
Table of treaties and international instruments 312(3)
Table of cases 315(2)
Index 317
Sumudu Atapattu is the Director of Research Centers and Senior Lecturer at the University of Wisconsin Law School, USA and lead counsel for human rights at the Center for International Sustainable Development Law, Montreal, Canada.