2012
DOI: 10.1080/13642987.2011.632135
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The impact of climate change on indigenous people – the implications for the cultural, spiritual, economic and legal rights of indigenous people

Abstract: Scientific evidence has established that athropogenic carbon pollution and climate change will have a catastrophic and devastating impact on indigenous people. 1 Sadly, many of humanity's oldest people face the loss of their traditional homelands and the extinction of their people as early as 2050, 2 which represents one of the greatest losses and tragedies to the human family and one of the most serious crimes in human history. The aim of this article is to therefore critically examine the impact of climate c… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Despite the impact of climate change on indigenous people, they are among the groups least likely to have their substantive and procedural rights recognized. As a consequence, indigenous people's rights are challenged both by climate change itself and by the current policy measures to mitigate it [ Williams , ]. A point that continues to be stressed is the involvement of indigenous people in governance issues, which is not only of great importance but also an ethical obligation.…”
Section: Sea Ice Change and Human Societymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the impact of climate change on indigenous people, they are among the groups least likely to have their substantive and procedural rights recognized. As a consequence, indigenous people's rights are challenged both by climate change itself and by the current policy measures to mitigate it [ Williams , ]. A point that continues to be stressed is the involvement of indigenous people in governance issues, which is not only of great importance but also an ethical obligation.…”
Section: Sea Ice Change and Human Societymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ethnography in courtroom settings requires engagement over time with diverse temporal, political, legal, ethical and relational concerns ( Walenta, 2020 ). With courts around the world playing diverse roles as theatres of power, notions of courtroom ethnography and critical socio-legal analysis might give rise to any number of points of emphasis in navigating tensions around capitalist interests, environmental justice, Indigenous rights and climate concerns ( Setzer & Vanhala, 2019 ; Williams, 2012 ). In certain contexts, research on climate justice is focusing attention to emerging forms of litigation and related optimism ( Klaudt, 2018 ).…”
Section: ‘Justice’ Climate Rhetoric and Pipeline Sagas: Political Gementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of the 130 articles identified systematically, 99 (76% of the total dataset) focus on Global North jurisdictions (either in an in‐depth analysis or as part of a comparative project), 26 (20% of the total dataset) have an international focus or cover jurisdictions in both North and South. Only five of the identified journal articles have a clear focus on litigation or litigation‐related issues in the Global South (He, ; Humby, ; Nyinevi, ; Ugochukwu, ; Williams, ) (Figure ). Other contributions to the literature on climate litigation in Global South countries can be found in edited books (Lord, Goldberg, Rajamani, & Brunnée, ) and as book chapters (Lin, ), but a first comprehensive study focused on Global South climate litigation is yet to be published.…”
Section: Overview Of the Literature On Climate Change Litigationmentioning
confidence: 99%