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Adjudicating Climate Change : Multidisciplinary Perspectives
Adjudicating Climate Change : Multidisciplinary Perspectives
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ISBN No.: 9781350501621
Pages: 272
Year: 202610
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 165.27
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

List of contributors Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction Myriam Gicquello (Newcastle University, UK), Melanie Jean Murcott ( University of Cape Town, Lawtons Africa, South Africa) and Emily Webster ( Late of University of Cambridge, UK). 1. Beyond Legal Doctrine: Justifying an Analysis of Extra-Legal Factors Shaping Climate Adjudication. Myriam Gicquello (Newcastle University, UK), Melanie Jean Murcott ( University of Cape Town, South Africa), Emily Webster (University of Cambridge, UK) and Allan Basajjasubi (Natural Justice, South Africa) PART 1: Inward-Looking Extra-Legal Factors 2. Contested Histories, Positionality and the Judiciary in the United-Kingdom, Canada and the United-States Jessica Crow (University of Cambridge, UK) and Tejas Rao ( University of Cambridge, UK) 3. On the Relationship Between the Federal Judicial Appointments Process and Recognition of Climate Rights in the United-States and South Africa James R. May (Washburn University, USA) and Chris Oxtoby ( University of Cape Town, South Africa) 4. Feelings Over (Legal) Reason: The Impact of Pre-Existing Beliefs and Ideologies on Climate Adjudication in the United-States Myriam Gicquello (Newcastle University, UK) PART 2: Outward-Looking Extra-Legal Factors 5.


Adjudicating Climate Injustice in Postcolonial African Environmental Literatures: Imbolo Mbue's How Beautiful We Wer e as Legal Archive and Testimony Paul Ugor ( University of Waterloo, Canada) 6. Charting the Indigenous Experience of Climate Litigation and Environmental Advocacy in Australia Harjeevan S. Narulla (Doughty Street Chambers, University of Oxford, London School of Economics, UK) and Ganur Maynard (North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency, Darwin, Australia) 7. Vernacularising Climate Change Adjudication in India: Seeing the 'Other' Way from the Perspective of Subaltern Farmers Nairita Roy Chaudhuri (Tilburg University, The Netherlands) 8. State Responsibility and Climate Justice: Extra-Legal Influences in Latin American Courts Sol Meckievi (University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, UK) 9. Climate Anxiety as Injustice and Climate Education as Empowerment: Lessons for Adjudication Silvia Cesa-Bianchi (University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, Sciences Po Paris, France), Rob Amos (Birkbeck University of London, UK) and Debbie Sparks (University of Cape Town, South Africa) 10. Climate Litigation as Template-Making: Adjudication and Homogenisation of Legal Strategies on Loss and Damage Arpitha Kodiveri (Vassar College, USA) 11. Climate Science in European Courtrooms: More than an Extra-Legal Factor? Birgit Peters (University of Trier, Germany) and Matteo Fermeglia (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands) Conclusion: Key Lessons Myriam Gicquello (Newcastle University, UK), Melanie Jean Murcott ( University of Cape Town, South Africa) and Emily Webster (Late of University of Cambridge, UK).


Index.


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