Biodiversity is in accelerated decline and urgent action is needed. In 2020, the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity ended, and none of its Aichi Targets were met. In parallel to this legally disappointing situation on a global level, the role of national courts in adjudicating climate change litigation is showing potential for effective mitigation and adaptation, and judges have become key actors in linking internationally agreed goals with tangible national commitments to mitigate climate change.
Can this pursuit of globally agreed goals at a local level be transposed and lead to a similar trend for biodiversity governance ? This edited collection gives readers an overview of the shape and reach of biodiversity litigation, drawing on specific national case studies from Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, India, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States and studies from the European Union and International Courts.
It considers two questions : firstly, what is the influence of international biodiversity law on biodiversity litigation ? Secondly, what are the trends of biodiversity litigation ? Leading experts discuss these questions from the perspective of developing, developed, and mega biodiverse countries, promoting the concept of biodiversity litigation as a common notion of environmental law, and arguing for more creative legal thinking when dealing with and analysing biodiversity-related disputes.
Biodiversity is in accelerated decline and urgent action is needed. In 2020, the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity ended, and none of its Aichi Targets were met. In parallel to this legally disappointing situation on a global level, the role of national courts in adjudicating climate change litigation is showing potential for effective mitigation and adaptation, and judges have become key actors in linking internationally agreed goals with tangible national commitments to mitigate climate change.
Can this pursuit of globally agreed goals at a local level be transposed and lead to a similar trend for biodiversity governance ? This edited collection gives readers an overview of the shape and reach of biodiversity litigation, drawing on specific national case studies from Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, India, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States and studies from the European Union and International Courts.
It considers two questions : firstly, what is the influence of international biodiversity law on biodiversity litigation ? Secondly, what are the trends of biodiversity litigation ? Leading experts discuss these questions from the perspective of developing, developed, and mega biodiverse countries, promoting the concept of biodiversity litigation as a common notion of environmental law, and arguing for more creative legal thinking when dealing with and analysing biodiversity-related disputes.