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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Sumudu Atapattu (University of Wisconsin, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 1.140kg ISBN: 9780367653101ISBN 10: 0367653109 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 22 May 2023 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThis latest work of Sumudu Atapattu is a much-needed contribution to the field of study of climate change and human rights.The devastating impacts of climate change are worsening as actors around the world engage to safeguard human life and protect the rights of all, including those most vulnerable and exposed.Professor Atapattu helps the academic as well as the policy and activist communities better understand how a human rights framing helps victims of environmental degradation. In whatever environmental arena one finds oneself, this book is a required tool and an important asset. Ambassador Dessima Williams, Formerly, Special Advisor on Sustainable Development Goals and Director, Office of the President of the UN General Assembly, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Grenada to the UN & Chair, Alliance of Small Island Developing States UN Human rights institutions are increasingly addressing the human rights impact of environmental degradation including climate change and unsustainable development, despite their mandates' silence on these issues.In this volume, Sumudu Atapattu lends her expertise to this emerging field and provides a comprehensive overview of how these human rights bodies have addressed these interlinkages. This volume fills a gap in the scholarly literature and should be of interest to scholars, students, activists, government officials, think tanks, and practicing lawyers. Professor Carmen G. Gonzalez and Morris I. Leibman, Professor of Law, Loyola University Chicago School of Law This brilliant survey by Sri Lankan international lawyer Sumudu Atapattu comes at a propitious moment -- viz., the adoption by the UN General Assembly of Resolution on the human right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment , preceded by a UN Human Rights Council Resolution. As explained by the author, it is not the intention of this study to engage in a discussion of scholarly writing or a literature review of the multiple global and regional human rights institutions so surveyed, but to examine the practice of these institutions in relation to environmental issues and whether there are any principles, standards and consistencies, giving birth to a new interdisciplinary area, and concluding with a critical analysis of the potential fragmentation and cross-fertilization in this emerging field. Professor Peter H. Sand, Institute of International Law, University of Munich, Formerly Legal Adviser for Environmental Affairs, World Bank, Commissioner for environmental damage, UN Compensation Commission, Geneva. This latest work of Sumudu Atapattu is a much-needed contribution to the field of study of climate change and human rights.The devastating impacts of climate change are worsening as actors around the world engage to safeguard human life and protect the rights of all, including those most vulnerable and exposed.Professor Atapattu helps the academic as well as the policy and activist communities better understand how a human rights framing helps victims of environmental degradation. In whatever environmental arena one finds oneself, this book is a required tool and an important asset. Ambassador Dessima Williams, Formerly, Special Advisor on Sustainable Development Goals and Director, Office of the President of the UN General Assembly, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Grenada to the UN & Chair, Alliance of Small Island Developing States UN Human rights institutions are increasingly addressing the human rights impact of environmental degradation including climate change and unsustainable development, despite their mandates' silence on these issues.In this volume, Sumudu Atapattu lends her expertise to this emerging field and provides a comprehensive overview of how these human rights bodies have addressed these interlinkages. This volume fills a gap in the scholarly literature and should be of interest to scholars, students, activists, government officials, think tanks, and practicing lawyers. Professor Carmen G. Gonzalez and Morris I. Leibman, Professor of Law, Loyola University Chicago School of Law This brilliant survey by Sri Lankan international lawyer Sumudu Atapattu comes at a propitious moment -- viz., the adoption by the UN General Assembly of Resolution on the human right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment , preceded by a UN Human Rights Council Resolution. As explained by the author, it is not the intention of this study to engage in a discussion of scholarly writing or a literature review of the multiple global and regional human rights institutions so surveyed, but to examine the practice of these institutions in relation to environmental issues and whether there are any principles, standards and consistencies, giving birth to a new interdisciplinary area, and concluding with a critical analysis of the potential fragmentation and cross-fertilization in this emerging field. Professor Peter H. Sand, Institute of International Law, University of Munich, Formerly Legal Adviser for Environmental Affairs, World Bank, Commissioner for environmental damage, UN Compensation Commission, Geneva Author InformationSumudu Atapattu is Teaching Professor and Director of the Global Legal Studies Center at the University of Wisconsin Law School. She is also the Executive Director of the campus-wide interdisciplinary Human Rights Program. She serves as the Lead Counsel for Human Rights at the Center for International Sustainable Development Law based in Montreal, Canada, is on the advisory board of the McGill International Journal of Sustainable Development Law and Policy, and is affiliated faculty at the Raoul Wallenberg Institute for Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, Sweden. She has published widely in the fields of international environmental law, climate change and human rights, environmental rights, and sustainable development. 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