Probing the hidden depths of climate law: Analysing national climate change legislation
This article sets out a tripartite method of analysing national climate change legislation.
27 November 2018
Publication details
Scotford, Eloise; Minas, Stephen. (2018)聽鈥楶robing the hidden depths of climate law: Analysing national climate change legislation鈥, Review of European, Comparative & International Environmental Law. Available online:
Abstract
National governments that are committed to a social transition in the pursuit of climate policy face a complex legal challenge in evaluating how their legal and regulatory architectures support climate policy and in introducing new legal measures to implement their Paris Agreement commitments. This article sets out a method for appraising how fragmented national climate鈥恟elevant laws combine to create an aggregated legal and regulatory landscape that frames and governs national responses to climate change. Appraising this kind of landscape is a methodologically fraught exercise, considering that climate change can intersect with many areas of law and regulation, which are all embedded within the histories, legal doctrines and governance frameworks of particular legal systems. We propose a tripartite method for this task 鈥 identifying 鈥榙irect鈥 or explicit climate laws, identifying 鈥榠ndirect鈥 or implicit climate laws, and investigating legal cultures that inform and express both types of climate鈥恟elated law. The article focuses on climate鈥恟elated legislation in countries with lawmaking assemblies in proposing this approach, arguing that the national scale and legislative processes are both particularly significant in evaluating climate laws. This approach to climate law methodology can support both national climate planning and multilateral processes such as the Paris Agreement's global stocktake.
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