scholarly journals Global Warming and Climate Change: A Critique on International Law and Policy

2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 38-42
Author(s):  
Lisa P Lukose ◽  
Climate Law ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 279-319
Author(s):  
Benjamin J. Richardson

Climate change has multifaceted aesthetic dimensions of legal significance. Global warming alters the aesthetic properties of nature, and further aesthetic changes are precipitated by climate mitigation and adaptation responses of impacted societies. The social and political struggles to influence climate change law are also influenced by aesthetics, as environmental activists and artists collaborate to influence public opinion, while conversely the business sector through its marketing and other aesthetic communications tries to persuade consumers of its climate-friendly practices to forestall serious action on global warming. This article distils and analyses these patterns in forging a novel account of the role of aesthetics in climate change law and policy, and it makes conclusions on how this field of law should consider aesthetic values through ‘curatorial’ guidance.


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 15
Author(s):  
Sri Wartini

Climate change refugess is caused by sudden impact disasters  and slow onset disasters because of climate change. The climate change refugess is not included as the refugees which are regulated under the Refugees Convention 1951, since the climate refugees are not caused by persecution. Thus, it is necessary to find out a solution based on international law to provide legal protection to the climate change refugees. The aim of the research is to analyse comprehensively the urgency of legal protection to the climate refugees and to find out an appropriate legal protection fo them.                                             The fundings of the research namely : First,  there is a legal lacuna to  the protection of climate change refugees ; second, The need to regulate the legal protection to the climate change refugees, since they become the victims of climate change.Key Words : Climate change refugees, global warming and urgency


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 458-481
Author(s):  
Alan Boyle

AbstractInter-state litigation is a weapon employed by weaker states with limited diplomatic leverage over their bigger, more powerful opponents. An authoritative judgment may facilitate a settlement of some kind, whether directly, by further negotiation, or simply by legitimising the claims made. The LOSC was negotiated at a time when climate change was not yet part of the international agenda; however, it must be interpreted and applied with subsequent developments in international law and policy in mind. The harmful, toxic, and persistent effects of climate change more than satisfy the test for marine pollution established by Article 1 of LOSC. Part XII applies to climate change insofar as it has or is likely to have deleterious effects on the marine environment. This article will discuss the role that Part XII of LOSC may play in enforcing states’ obligations to protect and preserve the marine environment from the effects of climate change.


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