Climate justice and disaster law / Rosemary Lyster.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781316227534 (ebook)
- 344.05/34
- K3585.5 .L97 2015
Item type | Current library | Call number | URL | Status | Barcode | |
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Ranganathan Library | 344.05/34 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Link to resource | Available | E01909 |
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344.046343 CON Oxford handbook of water politics and policy / | 344.046343 SHA Water Pollution And Law / | 344.049 GAN Animal laws in India / | 344.05/34 Climate justice and disaster law / | 344.0534 LYS Climate justice and disaster law / | 344.0534 SIN Disaster Management thresholds / | 344.0545 FLA Law drugs and the politics of childhood : From protection to punishment / |
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Jan 2016).
Machine generated contents note: 1. Climate science at the interface with law- and policy-making; 2. The international climate change negotiations: nothing more than sounding brass or tinkling cymbals?; 3. Towards a vision for climate justice in a post-2015 world; 4. Preventing climate disasters: integrating adaptation and disaster risk reduction; 5. Response, recovery and rebuilding; 6. Compensating the victims of climate disasters; 7. Towards an inclusive and impartial practical reasoning process on climate justice and disaster law in a post-2015 world.
Climate disasters demand an integration of multilateral negotiations on climate change, disaster risk reduction, sustainable development, human rights and human security. Via detailed examination of recent law and policy initiatives from around the world, and making use of a capability approach, Rosemary Lyster develops a unique approach to human and non-human climate justice and its application to all stages of a disaster: prevention; response, recovery and rebuilding; and compensation and risk transfer. She comprehensively analyses the complexities of climate science and their interfaces with the law- and policy-making processes, and also provides an in-depth analysis of multilateral climate change negotiations dating from the establishment of the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) to the Twentieth Conference of the Parties in Lima (COP 20) in December 2014.
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