TRANSITIONAL ADVENT IN CLIMATE CHANGE LITIGATION: IS IT TIME FOR CLIMATIZING THE JUDICIAL DECISIONS?

TRANSITIONAL ADVENT IN CLIMATE CHANGE LITIGATION: IS IT TIME FOR CLIMATIZING THE JUDICIAL DECISIONS?

TRANSITIONAL ADVENT IN CLIMATE CHANGE LITIGATION: IS IT TIME FOR CLIMATIZING THE JUDICIAL DECISIONS?

Author – IESHA SHARMA, Student of UPES, DEHRADUN

Best Citation – IESHA SHARMA, TRANSITIONAL ADVENT IN CLIMATE CHANGE LITIGATION: IS IT TIME FOR CLIMATIZING THE JUDICIAL DECISIONS?, INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LEGAL RESEARCH JOURNAL, 1 (1) of 2023, Pg. 26, ISBN (P) – 978-81-960702-1-2.

Abstract

Climate litigation has numerous merits and it has been an emerging tool for climate governance. For studies on the topic the establishment approach of the issue has been from intra state perspective and it has been extended to the nature of offers from the international focus, climate change litigation in the domestic and the international to reflect the signs in the growth of the research. The objective of this paper is to reflect that India has not taken a root in the field of the climate change litigations. The paper argues that India can develop climate change litigations to effectively address the serious problem of climate change Tackling of the issue of climate change requires the multidimensional governance which would requires the change in the regime of both the top-down of the regulation from the government in the agencies and this paper aims to reflects the participation of the judicial and the non- judicial decisions in benefit to adopt such an regime in the reference of the same.  There are few of the Reponses in the India and subject of the several in the insignificant chapter in the history of the historiographical observation on the INA as a prelude to a balance in the critical analysis of the outset of the issue which are being perceived in slights of their religious traditional also comes under the ambit of the hindsight of the peculiar of the other element in the climate change litigations.

Keywords: Climate change, Litigation, Global Warming, tribunals