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Non-Governmental Actors in International Climate Change Law - The Case of Arctic Indigenous Peoples (Hardcover)
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Non-Governmental Actors in International Climate Change Law - The Case of Arctic Indigenous Peoples (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Research in Polar Law
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Focusing on how to improve the participation of non-governmental
actors in the making of international climate change laws, this
book is a conversation on the relevance of a human rights-based
approach to international climate change law-making. The book
considers a possible reform of the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change institutional arrangement, inspired by
the practice and model of participation of Arctic Indigenous
Peoples in the Arctic Council. Different non-State entities play a
fundamental role in the development and enforcement of the climate
change regime by enhancing the knowledge base of decision-making,
keeping States in line with their commitments, and engaging in
private initiatives aimed at mitigating the impacts of global
warming. Albeit non-governmental and subnational actors
increasingly work alongside States in the making of a climate
change regime, the category of observers through which they
participate in intergovernmental negotiations only gives them
limited rights and their participation in international norm-making
has at times been impaired. The relevance of a human rights-based
approach consists in recognising the status of individuals and
groups as rights-holders under human rights law, a paradigm that
was first established by Arctic Indigenous Peoples when claiming
their participatory rights in the Arctic Council, the main forum of
governance of the Arctic region. This book argues that, in the
absence of a globally binding treaty regulating procedural rights
in intergovernmental negotiations, the emerging relationship
between human rights and climate change could serve as a legal
basis for the enhancement of non-governmental actors' procedural
rights, establishing the right to participation as a right in
itself and which can benefit the governance of climate change. Due
to the relevance of the addressed subject, the book is destined to
a broad readership and will be of use to academic researchers, law
practitioners, policy-makers and non-governmental organisations'
representatives.
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