Environmental Justice, Climate Change and Human Rights. Different Contributions, Different Consequences and Different Capabilities Should Equal Different Human Rights Obligations
Environmental Justice, Climate Change and Human Rights. Different Contributions, Different Consequences and Different Capabilities Should Equal Different Human Rights Obligations
Date
2020
Authors
Catalão, Mariana : Seixas Lopes Nunes
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus of Human Rights
Abstract
The current environmental crisis poses itself as one of the biggest threats to
the enjoyment of human rights. Everywhere, people´s human rights are at risk;
however vulnerable communities, particularly the ones in poorer countries, are
disproportionately in danger.
This higher risk for the poorer population is inversely proportional to
contribution towards the environmental crisis, especially focusing on global
warming caused by the emission of greenhouse gases that consequently leads
to climate change. The disparity between contribution to the issue of climate
change, vulnerability to threats to the enjoyment of human rights caused by the
effects of climate change and capability to prevent these threats generates an
environmental justice problem that highlights the inequity between the Global
North and the Global South.
This thesis aims to showcase how human rights law can be used to bridge
this gap between developed and developing countries, in order to fulfil
environmental justice imperatives. The aspect of human rights law identified as
one of the most apt to address this issue is the concept of extraterritorial human
rights obligations of states.
The thesis highlights how the use of extraterritorial human rights obligations
of states is a legally plausible solution to address climate change and issues arising
from environmental injustice, analysing positions of international stakeholders
and respected doctrine that support the imposition of these obligations.
Finally, a practical way of operationalising the imposition of extraterritorial
human rights obligations, in the field of climate change, is presented, through
the proposal of a liability scheme that reverts in favour of those most affected
by climate change.
Description
Second semester University: University of Helsinki.
Keywords
environment,
human rights,
climatic changes,
developing countries,
international obligations,
global warming