Growing up in a world on fire : children take centre-stage in the strategic climate litigation movement
Growing up in a world on fire : children take centre-stage in the strategic climate litigation movement
Date
2022
Authors
Capretti, André
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Abstract
The climate crisis is an existential threat to humanity, the greatest human rights issue of our time,
and a glaring intergenerational injustice. Faced with the urgent need to take action, political
leaders around the world have largely fallen short. Strategic litigation has thus gained
prominence as a valuable tool for realizing human rights and inciting governmental action in the
fight against climate change. Children in particular have proven to be powerful actors in
advocating for climate justice in the streets and, increasingly, in the courtroom. Children and
youth are especially motivated to address climate change, as it is a phenomenon that
disproportionately impacts them and will continue to have grave and long-lasting consequences
for their futures. Consequently, a new trend has emerged wherein strategic litigation is being
used to protect and uphold the rights of children in the climate crisis. However, this occurs in a
context where children experience important obstacles in accessing justice and obtaining
effective remedies for human rights violations. This work therefore aims to understand how
strategic litigation at different levels, aimed at protecting the rights of children in the context of
the climate crisis, can uphold equality rights and ensure access to justice. By analyzing case
studies at the international (UN Committee on the Rights of the Child), regional (European Court
of Human Rights), and domestic (Canada) levels, this piece identifies and critically examines
some of the challenges and opportunities faced by young climate litigants.
Key words: children’s rights; climate change; strategic litigation; access to justice.
Description
Second semester University: Université de Montpellier. Global Campus awarded thesis 2021/2022
Keywords
children's rights,
children rights,
climatic changes,
justice,
case law