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1 - Introduction

from Part I - Legal, scientific and policy aspects

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Jutta Brunnée
Affiliation:
Associate Dean of Law (Graduate) and Professor of Law and Metcalf Chair in Environmental Law, University of Toronto
Silke Goldberg
Affiliation:
Senior Associate in Herbert Smith’s Global Energy practice and a Research Fellow in Energy Law at Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (Netherlands)
Lavanya Rajamani
Affiliation:
Professor at the Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi
Richard Lord
Affiliation:
Brick Court Chambers
Silke Goldberg
Affiliation:
Herbert Smith LLP
Lavanya Rajamani
Affiliation:
Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi
Jutta Brunnée
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
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Summary

1.01Climate change presents to society as a whole a wide range of threats, and a narrower range of opportunities, on the political, economic and social level. It also poses questions and challenges for the law. These legal questions and challenges are relevant not just to lawyers; the law affects all members of society to a greater or lesser extent, whether as policymakers, businesspeople, campaigners of all hues or individual citizens. All of these actors are subject to a complex and much disputed matrix of rights and obligations: legal rights and obligations, political and moral rights and obligations, owed by and to individuals, corporations and States, and, in some cases, to future generations. The law is a tool; it may variously be a sword, a shield and the rock on which societies are built.

1.02Climate change itself is multifaceted in many respects; it raises physical, scientific, economic, social, political and cultural issues along with legal ones. The web connecting the various causes and effects of climate change is complex. Possible legal solutions to climate change problems are likewise complex and difficult to classify. They encompass a wide range of international and national law. The law exists to serve society, and has accordingly evolved to meet the changing needs and challenges of society. With climate change, this evolution involves – and will, we believe, increasingly involve – both the application of existing legal concepts, including some ancient doctrines generally seen as dormant if not extinct, to new factual issues, and the development of new legal concepts.

Type
Chapter
Information
Climate Change Liability
Transnational Law and Practice
, pp. 3 - 7
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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References

Arrighi, GiovanniSilver, Beverly J.Brewer, Benjamin D.Industrial Convergence, Globalization, and the Persistence of the North-South DivideStudies in Comparative International Development 38 2003 3Google Scholar

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