Judging Climate Change: The Role of the Judiciary in the Fight Against Climate Change

This paper aims to determine what the proper role of the judiciary should be in developing climate change policy. It does so in light of the sometimes contentious relationship between ‘activist’ or ‘progressive’ judges and the doctrine of separation of powers. This relationship has a long history by...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Heather Colby, Ana Stella Ebbersmeyer, Lisa Marie Heim, Marthe Kielland Røssaak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scandinavian University Press (Universitetsforlaget) 2020-01-01
Series:Oslo Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.idunn.no/oslo_law_review/2020/03/judging_climate_change_the_role_of_the_judiciary_in_the_fi
id doaj-72f4cf6d5bc44c48a284356998d63388
record_format Article
spelling doaj-72f4cf6d5bc44c48a284356998d633882021-03-05T22:45:00ZengScandinavian University Press (Universitetsforlaget)Oslo Law Review2387-32992020-01-01716818510.18261/ISSN.2387-3299-2020-03-0318948693Judging Climate Change: The Role of the Judiciary in the Fight Against Climate ChangeHeather ColbyAna Stella EbbersmeyerLisa Marie HeimMarthe Kielland RøssaakThis paper aims to determine what the proper role of the judiciary should be in developing climate change policy. It does so in light of the sometimes contentious relationship between ‘activist’ or ‘progressive’ judges and the doctrine of separation of powers. This relationship has a long history by which much of human rights law has been shaped. The paper analyses the court judgments in the cases of Urgenda v Kingdom of the Netherlands, Juliana v United States, and Friends of the Irish Environment v Ireland in order to identify how different legal systems view this relationship. The paper also considers the upcoming climate case in the Supreme Court of Norway. In particular, the question is asked whether the separation of powers in Europe and the United States is a doctrine mandating systems of power balance rather than of strict separation. Drawing on the argumentation from the Urgenda judgment, the paper concludes that the protection and development of human rights should be the main concern in climate change litigation. The judiciary should accordingly take an important role in climate change policy-making in order for the state to comply with its duty to instigate emission limits.https://www.idunn.no/oslo_law_review/2020/03/judging_climate_change_the_role_of_the_judiciary_in_the_fiJudicial activismclimate change litigationjudiciary and climate change policyUrgenda v Kingdom of the NetherlandsJuliana v United StatesFriends of the Irish Environment v Ireland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heather Colby
Ana Stella Ebbersmeyer
Lisa Marie Heim
Marthe Kielland Røssaak
spellingShingle Heather Colby
Ana Stella Ebbersmeyer
Lisa Marie Heim
Marthe Kielland Røssaak
Judging Climate Change: The Role of the Judiciary in the Fight Against Climate Change
Oslo Law Review
Judicial activism
climate change litigation
judiciary and climate change policy
Urgenda v Kingdom of the Netherlands
Juliana v United States
Friends of the Irish Environment v Ireland
author_facet Heather Colby
Ana Stella Ebbersmeyer
Lisa Marie Heim
Marthe Kielland Røssaak
author_sort Heather Colby
title Judging Climate Change: The Role of the Judiciary in the Fight Against Climate Change
title_short Judging Climate Change: The Role of the Judiciary in the Fight Against Climate Change
title_full Judging Climate Change: The Role of the Judiciary in the Fight Against Climate Change
title_fullStr Judging Climate Change: The Role of the Judiciary in the Fight Against Climate Change
title_full_unstemmed Judging Climate Change: The Role of the Judiciary in the Fight Against Climate Change
title_sort judging climate change: the role of the judiciary in the fight against climate change
publisher Scandinavian University Press (Universitetsforlaget)
series Oslo Law Review
issn 2387-3299
publishDate 2020-01-01
description This paper aims to determine what the proper role of the judiciary should be in developing climate change policy. It does so in light of the sometimes contentious relationship between ‘activist’ or ‘progressive’ judges and the doctrine of separation of powers. This relationship has a long history by which much of human rights law has been shaped. The paper analyses the court judgments in the cases of Urgenda v Kingdom of the Netherlands, Juliana v United States, and Friends of the Irish Environment v Ireland in order to identify how different legal systems view this relationship. The paper also considers the upcoming climate case in the Supreme Court of Norway. In particular, the question is asked whether the separation of powers in Europe and the United States is a doctrine mandating systems of power balance rather than of strict separation. Drawing on the argumentation from the Urgenda judgment, the paper concludes that the protection and development of human rights should be the main concern in climate change litigation. The judiciary should accordingly take an important role in climate change policy-making in order for the state to comply with its duty to instigate emission limits.
topic Judicial activism
climate change litigation
judiciary and climate change policy
Urgenda v Kingdom of the Netherlands
Juliana v United States
Friends of the Irish Environment v Ireland
url https://www.idunn.no/oslo_law_review/2020/03/judging_climate_change_the_role_of_the_judiciary_in_the_fi
work_keys_str_mv AT heathercolby judgingclimatechangetheroleofthejudiciaryinthefightagainstclimatechange
AT anastellaebbersmeyer judgingclimatechangetheroleofthejudiciaryinthefightagainstclimatechange
AT lisamarieheim judgingclimatechangetheroleofthejudiciaryinthefightagainstclimatechange
AT marthekiellandrøssaak judgingclimatechangetheroleofthejudiciaryinthefightagainstclimatechange
_version_ 1724230212589191168