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Refuge from climate change-related harm: Evaluating the scope of international protection within the Common European Asylum System

Scott, Matthew LU (2015)
Abstract
Extreme weather events have the potential to cause serious harm and can contribute to displacement. Such events are expected to increase in frequency and/or intensity as a consequence of climate change. It is therefore of concern that there is widely considered to be a protection gap when affected individuals cross an international border. However, apart from a handful of cases in Australia and New Zealand, the contours of this perceived gap have not been fully explored in practice. In its judgment in Teitiota v Chief Executive of the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment, the High Court of New Zealand described a claim brought by a citizen of the low-lying Pacific island nation of Kiribati seeking protection from climate... (More)
Extreme weather events have the potential to cause serious harm and can contribute to displacement. Such events are expected to increase in frequency and/or intensity as a consequence of climate change. It is therefore of concern that there is widely considered to be a protection gap when affected individuals cross an international border. However, apart from a handful of cases in Australia and New Zealand, the contours of this perceived gap have not been fully explored in practice. In its judgment in Teitiota v Chief Executive of the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment, the High Court of New Zealand described a claim brought by a citizen of the low-lying Pacific island nation of Kiribati seeking protection from climate change-related harm as an ‘impermissible’ attempt to ‘dramatically’ expand the scope of the Refugee Convention. Far from spelling the end of litigation, this Chapter argues that this case, along with earlier cases in Australia and New Zealand, helps to clarify ways in which migrants fearing disaster-related harm may secure international protection in an era of climate change. Building on the notion of ‘pathways to protection’ articulated in AF (Kiribati), the Chapter considers the different circumstances in which affected persons may be entitled to international protection within the European Union and how the EU Qualification Directive might be relied upon to incrementally extend the scope protection in this context. The Chapter concludes that litigation may contribute to the development of the law by consolidating existing precedents and securing new ones, but also potentially through the articulation of normative principles that may help to guide State practice in a warmer world. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
EU Qualification Directive, European Convention on Human Rights, asylum, international protection, vulnerability, harm, climate change, disaster, EU Directive on Temporary Protection, Australia, New Zealand, litigation, miljörätt, environmental law, folkrätt, public international law
host publication
Seeking asylum in the European Union: Selected protection issues raised by the second phase of the Common European Asylum System
editor
Bauloz, C ; Ciger, M ; Singer, S and Stoyanova, V
publisher
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers
external identifiers
  • scopus:84937116913
project
Lund Human Rights Research Hub
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0acdabd5-a8ee-4315-ba8a-6c64d7f0a84d (old id 4820683)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 11:37:54
date last changed
2022-04-16 03:42:59
@inbook{0acdabd5-a8ee-4315-ba8a-6c64d7f0a84d,
  abstract     = {{Extreme weather events have the potential to cause serious harm and can contribute to displacement. Such events are expected to increase in frequency and/or intensity as a consequence of climate change. It is therefore of concern that there is widely considered to be a protection gap when affected individuals cross an international border. However, apart from a handful of cases in Australia and New Zealand, the contours of this perceived gap have not been fully explored in practice. In its judgment in Teitiota v Chief Executive of the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment, the High Court of New Zealand described a claim brought by a citizen of the low-lying Pacific island nation of Kiribati seeking protection from climate change-related harm as an ‘impermissible’ attempt to ‘dramatically’ expand the scope of the Refugee Convention. Far from spelling the end of litigation, this Chapter argues that this case, along with earlier cases in Australia and New Zealand, helps to clarify ways in which migrants fearing disaster-related harm may secure international protection in an era of climate change. Building on the notion of ‘pathways to protection’ articulated in AF (Kiribati), the Chapter considers the different circumstances in which affected persons may be entitled to international protection within the European Union and how the EU Qualification Directive might be relied upon to incrementally extend the scope protection in this context. The Chapter concludes that litigation may contribute to the development of the law by consolidating existing precedents and securing new ones, but also potentially through the articulation of normative principles that may help to guide State practice in a warmer world.}},
  author       = {{Scott, Matthew}},
  booktitle    = {{Seeking asylum in the European Union: Selected protection issues raised by the second phase of the Common European Asylum System}},
  editor       = {{Bauloz, C and Ciger, M and Singer, S and Stoyanova, V}},
  keywords     = {{EU Qualification Directive; European Convention on Human Rights; asylum; international protection; vulnerability; harm; climate change; disaster; EU Directive on Temporary Protection; Australia; New Zealand; litigation; miljörätt; environmental law; folkrätt; public international law}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Martinus Nijhoff Publishers}},
  title        = {{Refuge from climate change-related harm: Evaluating the scope of international protection within the Common European Asylum System}},
  year         = {{2015}},
}