This appraisal of the collection of papers in this issue
argues that historical injustice saturates the problem of climate
change. Those most vulnerable to climate change today are largely those
who already lack resources – who have been on the wrong end of colonial
history, or who have been globalization's losers, or who have suffered
neglect, or exclusion at the hands of their own
governments. They are those who have benefited little or not at all
from a carbon-intensive global economy, but who have long suffered its
side effects. The paper notes that the particular form
taken by law in international and transnational affairs, having largely
followed the historical progress of industrialism, colonialism and
globalization, is peculiarly ill-suited to the task of addressing this
vulnerability.
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