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Climate Change Litigation

Climate Change Litigation

Climate Change Litigation

Regulatory Pathways to Cleaner Energy
Jacqueline Peel, University of Melbourne
Hari M. Osofsky, University of Minnesota
November 2017
Available
Paperback
9781316641071

    This examination of the role of litigation in addressing the problem of climate change focuses not only on how the massive and growing number of lawsuits influences regulation directly, but also on how the lawsuits shape corporate behaviour and public opinion. It provides readers with an understanding of how these lawsuits have shaped approaches to mitigation and adaptation, and have been used to try to force and to block regulation. There is a particular emphasis on lawsuits in the United States and Australia, the two jurisdictions which have had the most climate change litigation in the world, and the lessons provide broader insights into the role of courts in addressing climate change.

    • The examination of the regulatory effects of climate change litigation is relevant to readers who want to know about the real world impact of lawsuits which raise climate change issues
    • Looks at the direct and indirect regulatory effect in order to demonstrate how these lawsuits change corporate behaviour and public opinion
    • Considers both pro- and anti-regulatory litigation, thereby providing a balanced perspective on the role that courts are playing in climate change regulation

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Peel and Osofsky do an excellent job of providing the necessary factual and legal information needed to understand the various aspects of this complex topic. Whether the reader possesses only a basic knowledge of the subject or is well versed, this book should provide considerable insight. While Climate Change Litigation provides information, theories, and strategies designed to assist those seeking to use the court system as a vehicle for reducing carbon emissions, attorneys, advocacy groups, and other stakeholders positioned on the opposite side of such efforts also will find this book to be a useful resource for generating legal strategies and preparing for potential future legal actions."
    Mark Popielarski, Law Library Journal

    See more reviews

    Product details

    November 2017
    Paperback
    9781316641071
    375 pages
    230 × 153 × 20 mm
    0.57kg
    2 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Why climate change litigation matters
    • 2. Model for understanding litigation's regulatory impact
    • 3. Litigation as a mitigation tool
    • 4. Litigation as an adaptation tool
    • 5. Corporate responses to litigation
    • 6. Litigation's role in shaping social norms
    • 7. Barriers to progress
    • 8. The future of climate change litigation.
      Authors
    • Jacqueline Peel , University of Melbourne

      Jacqueline Peel is Professor of Law at Melbourne Law School, Australia, and an internationally recognised expert on climate change law. Her teaching and research interests lie in the areas of environmental law (domestic and international), risk regulation and the role of science, and climate change law.

    • Hari M. Osofsky , University of Minnesota

      Hari M. Osofsky is a Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota, where she is also the Director of the Energy Transition Lab and the Director of the Joint Degree Program in Law, Science, and Technology. Her research focuses on energy transition and climate change.