ABSTRACT

Do anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions affect human rights? Should fundamental rights constrain climate policies? Scientific evidence demonstrates that anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions contribute to increasing atmospheric temperatures, soon passing the compromising threshold of 2° C. Consequences such as Typhoon Haiyan prove that climate alteration has the potential to significantly impair basic human needs. Although the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and human rights regulatory regimes have so far proceeded separately, awareness is arising about their reciprocal implications. Based on tripartite fundamental obligations, this volume explores the relationship between climate change and interdependent human rights, through the lens of an international and comparative perspective. Along the lines of the metaphor of the ‘wall’, the research ultimately investigates the possibility of overcoming the divide between universal rights and climate change, and underlying barriers.

This book aims to be a useful resource not only for practitioners, policymakers, academics, and students in international, comparative, environmental law and politics and human rights, but also for the wider public.

part |88 pages

Specific rights

chapter |18 pages

Climate change and right to life

Limits and potentialities of the human rights protection system

chapter |15 pages

Climate change and interdependent human rights to food, water and health

The contest between harmony and invention

chapter |14 pages

Waterworld

Climate change, Statehood and the right to self-determination

chapter |15 pages

Two-pronged right to development and climate change

Reciprocal implications

chapter |24 pages

Untying the Gordian Knot

Towards the human right to a climatically sustainable environment?

part |62 pages

Specific regimes

chapter |14 pages

A double-edged sword

Climate change, biodiversity and human rights

chapter |16 pages

Climate change, migration and human rights

Towards group-specific protection?

chapter |18 pages

Linking trade and climate change

What room for human rights?

part |121 pages

Institutional prospects

chapter |20 pages

Climate change and human rights in the Asia-Pacific

A fragmented approach

chapter |20 pages

All in all it was all just bricks in the wall

European legal systems, climate change and human rights