Coloniality of International Climate Litigation and Climate (In-)Justice: Exploring Challenges and Perspectives from the Global South

Authors

  • Mehak Ali Lecturer, Dr. Muhammad Iqbal Law School, Government College University (GCU), Lahore. mehak.ali@gcu.edu.pk
  • Muhammad Manzoor Elahi Lecturer, Department of Political Science, Government College University (GCU), Lahore. mmelahi@gcu.edu.pk
  • Muhammad Azeem Farooqi In charge/ Assistant Professor, Dr. Muhammad Iqbal Law School, Government College University (GCU), Lahore. azeem.farooqi@gcu.edu.pk

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.70670/sra.v3i1.395

Keywords:

Climate Justice, Global South, Climate litigation, Climate coloniality, ICJ, UNFCCC

Abstract

This research delves into the intersection of coloniality and climate (in-)justice vis-a-vis litigation efforts by the Global South. The objective is to mainly explore how historical and ongoing patterns of neo-colonialism shape legal framework of climate governance and often cause marginalization and climate injustice to poor nations of the Global South. A qualitative exploratory-cum-analytical approach is applied under critical lens of post-colonial framework to analyse the litigation case studies, historical inequalities and legal frameworks. The findings uncovers the significant barriers in seeking climate justice i.e., structural biases, north-dominated litigations, inaccessibility to resources, political marginalization, locus standi and causation, and advisory opinion for small island states. The study concludes with a way forward that decoloniality of climate litigation is essential to seek equitable and inclusive global climate justice.

Downloads

Published

29-01-2025

How to Cite

Mehak Ali, Muhammad Manzoor Elahi, & Muhammad Azeem Farooqi. (2025). Coloniality of International Climate Litigation and Climate (In-)Justice: Exploring Challenges and Perspectives from the Global South . Social Science Review Archives, 3(1), 965–977. https://doi.org/10.70670/sra.v3i1.395