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TikTok video from Emily Wilkinson (@emilysewilkinson): “All of this snow has. 979.
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2022/02/2231 Likes, TikTok video from emily (@emily.mayfield7): “@. 202.
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2023/04/10Emily Wilkinson, a Senior Research Fellow at ODI and director of the Resilient and Sustainable Islands initiative (RESI), greets the audience.
Sara Pantuliano, ODI’s Chief Executive, provides some introductory remarks and puts the event in the context of the upcoming vote at the UN General Assembly.
Nadia Sánchez, an international lawyer at Climate Legal Consulting and a Visiting Researcher with Utrecht University, sets the scene by introducing the role of international law in advancing climate justice.
Cristián Delpiano Lira, President of Chile’s Second Environmental Tribunal, describes recent progress in advancing climate justice through the Chilean courts, and gives a sense of how far climate litigation can go.
The first panel session, on the synergies between climate justice litigation and international law, begins. Rohan Nanthakumar (Senior Solicitor in the Pasifika Program, which is part of Australia’s Environmental Defenders Office) and James Goldston (Executive Director of the Open Society Justice Initiative) discuss how international law can influence national climate litigation, and what to expect from processes relating to advisory opinions from international courts.
His Excellency Ralph Regenvanu, Vanuatu’s Minister of Climate Change Adaptation, Meteorology and Geo-Hazards, Energy, Environment and Disaster Risk Management, speaks via video message about Vanuatu's initiative to bring climate change to the International Court of Justice.
Christopher Bartlett, Climate Diplomacy Manager for the Republic of Vanuatu, moderates a second panel discussion on the role of international courts in climate justice more broadly, and how they sit within our overall climate architecture. Panelists Nicole Ponce (Front Convener for Asia, World's Youth for Climate Justice), Harjeet Singh (Climate Justice Lead Climate Action Network International) and Digno Montalván (Researcher at the Universidad Carlos III in Madrid) talk about how advisory opinions could influence national climate litigation, and the role of youth in mobilising climate action.
Emily poses questions to the panelists from the audience.
Ms. Rebecca Fabrizi, the UK’s Small Island Developing States (SIDS) Envoy, closes the session with some final remarks.