| The EU, Climate Change and Global Environmental Governance |
This series of three seminars is organised by Chad Damro (SPS), Elizabeth Bomberg (SPS) and Navraj Singh Ghaleigh
(Law) at the University of Edinburgh throughout 2009. The seminar
series has been made possible by the generous financial support of the
Europa Institute.
| Seminar Three: Climate Change in the Courts - Emerging Patterns |
13 November 2009 Climate
change litigation, and its academic literature, has to date focused on
the means by which extant legal tools can deliver environmental
justice, however defined. In various fora various legal instruments
have been deployed to address the climate change problematic. Whether
at the sub-, supra-, or national level, there has been an anxious
search for causes of action to hold governments and other social actors
to account for not adequately addressing their 'climate change
responsibilities'. To this narrative may be added an emerging category
of legal challenges whereby the complex regulatory structures
constituting, surrounding and supporting legal responses to climate
change are finding themselves subjected to scrutiny in courts
and tribunals. The litigation before the European Court of Justice
concerning the EU's Emissions Trading Scheme - overwhelming the world's
largest carbon market - is emblematic of such attempts to limit
regulation. In such cases, litigation may be thought of as subversive
to, rather than supportive of, the ambitions of UNFCCC and its progeny.
As mechanisms to address climate change emerge in myriad polities, such
litigation assumes ever greater importance. The purpose of this
seminar is to examine such issues and develop a set of tools with which
the patterns of climate change litigation can be understood. Such
inquiries might include, but need not be limited to the: - evolving categorisations of claims that are finding their ways into courts and tribunals; - relationship between national and supra- and international law - claims of judicial globalisation; - dialogical character of the litigation process; - roles that litigation serves, and its efficacy as a regulatory tool. Programme
Participants: Dr Abbe Brown, Edinburgh Law School, University of Edinburgh Long Abstract Professor Hari Osofsky, Assoc. Professor, Washington & Lee School of Law, USA Draft Paper Ms Kate Miles, Law School, University of Sydney, Australia Draft Paper Dr Ole Pedersen, Law School, University of Newcastle, UK Draft Paper  Professor David Scholsberg, Northern Arizona University, USA Draft Paper Mr Anatole Boute, Groningen Centre of Energy Law, The Netherlands Draft Paper  Ms Jolene Lin, Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong Draft Paper Navraj Singh Ghaleigh, Edinburgh Law School, University of Edinburgh Presentation The
seminar will be a closed session, with the speakers (a small group of
scholars and practitioners) joined by a number of invited experts.
Papers will be distributed in advance. Background Paper Public Lecture:
Note that on 12 November Professor Hari Osofsky will be delivering the first Brodies Environmental Law Lecture of 2009/10. Title: Diagonal Federalism and Climate Change: Implications for the Obama Administration 6pm, L175, Old College. All are very welcome. Lecture Flyer
Contact: Navraj Singh Ghaleigh (n.ghaleigh@ed.ac.uk) | Seminar Two: Climate Change and Inter-Governmental Relations |
Date: 1 May 2009
This
seminar will explore the unique multi-level dynamics of climate change
mitigation and adaptation. Addressing climate change requires
sustained interaction and cooperation between levels of governance
(local/national/supranational). But it also raises thorny
constitutional issues in terms of legal competence and responsibility.
This seminar will explore this dynamic in comparative transatlantic
perspective. It will bring together experts and practitioners on
environmental intergovernmental relations in the EU and US, with
particular emphasis on the role of US states, German Länder, and the
Scotland-UK-EU dynamic.
Our speakers/presenters include: Dr. Elizabeth Bomberg, ‘Climate Change and Inter-Governmental Relations in Transatlantic Perspective: Key Themes’ Slides Miranda Schreurs
(Free University Berlin) ‘Top Down, Bottom Up, and Horizontal Linkages
in Climate Change Policy Making: Transatlantic Perspectives’ Slides Wilfried Swenden, Nicola McEwen & Elizabeth Bomberg (UoE) ‘Intergovernmental politics and climate change: Scotland, UK, EU’ Paper Slides Duncan McLaren, Friends of the Earth Scotland Philip Wright, Deputy Director, and Head of Climate Change Division Scottish Government Prof. Barry Rabe, Brookings Institution and University of Michigan
Workshop Summary Contact: Elizabeth Bomberg (e.bomberg@ed.ac.uk) This seminar is supported by UACES.
Seminar One: Climate Change and the New Transatlantic Relationship
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The
EU needs to consider seriously the possibility of a change in US
climate change policy following the US presidential election of
November 2008. Ongoing international negotiations over a replacement
for the Kyoto Protocol provide the opportunity for a possible
transatlantic compromise on climate change. This seminar will bring
together scholars to explore the prospects of transatlantic climate
change cooperation under a new US administration and a possible
post-Kyoto agreement. Date: 13 March 2009 Our speakers/presenters include: Dr. Elizabeth Bomberg, Senior Lecturer, University of Edinburgh. Bomberg Paper Dr. Chad Damro, Senior Lecturer, University of Edinburgh. Damro Paper Dr. Sebastian Oberthür, Scientific Director, Institute for European Studies, Vrije Universiteit Brussel. Oberthür Paper Professor John Vogler, University of Keele. Dr. Anthony Zito, Reader in Politics, University of Newcastle. Zito Paper
PUBLIC LECTURE:
Dr Anthony Zito: 'Environmental Agencies as Agents of Multi-level Governance and Learning'. David Hume Tower, Faculty Room North, 13 March, 2-4pm
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