Pretoria University Law Press (PULP)

PULP is an open-access publisher based at the Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria

Climate change justice and human rights: An African perspective
Edited by Ademola Oluborode Jegede and Oluwatoyin Adejonwo
2022
ISBN: 978-1-7764117-3-3
Pages: 285
Print version: Available
Electronic version: Free PDF available

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About the publication 

Populations in Africa are vulnerable to both the direct and indirect adverse effects of climate change that are of human rights significance. The urgency for states in Africa to implement climate interventions while they face developmental challenges, however, raises questions of ‘justice’ or ‘fairness’ between the developed and the developing states. Consequently, interrogating how the human rights paradigm may respond to negative implications of climate change and its ‘fairness’ is important as states continue to engage with the climate change standard setting.

This edited volume critically interrogates human rights paradigm as an intervention to secure climate change justice for vulnerable populations; analyses regional protection against human rights consequences of climate change; and assesses emerging interventions based on domestic regulatory frameworks on climate change in selected states in Africa.


Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Abbreviations and acronyms
Dedication 

 1 Introducing climate change justice and human rights: An African perspective
Ademola Oluborode Jegede and Oluwatoyin Adejonwo 

 PART I: Human rights paradigm as an intervention to climate change

 2 The role of human rights soft law instruments in clarifying the obligations of fossil fuel companies for climate change interventions in Africa
Elsabé Boshoff 

 3 Human rights approach to climate justice in Africa: Experiences from other jurisdictions
Oluwatoyin Adejonwo and Olubunmi Afinowi  

 4 Promoting reproductive rights as a pathway to climate compatible development in Africa
Oluwatoyin Adejonwo 

 PART II: Climate change and regional protection of human rights 

 5 The adequacy of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child in the risky trinity of climate change, food security and children
Robert Doya Nanima and Ebenezer Durojaye 

 6 Connecting climate change and human rights in Africa: The potential role of non-governmental organisations in the African human rights system
Ademola Oluborode Jegede

 7 Climate transparency in Africa: An inquiry into the role of the African Peer Review Mechanism
Mansha Mohee 

PART III: Domestic regulatory frameworks on climate change and emerging jurisprudence 

 8 Climate finance in Africa through a human rights lens: A case study of the Turkana people in Kenya
Attiya Waris, Afshin Nazir and Parita Shah 

 9 Low carbon energy sources as a tool in actualising the right to development in Africa: A Nigerian case study
Jumoke Akinbusoye 

  10 Promoting and protecting human rights through implementation of the Paris Agreement in Kenya
David Achero Mufuayia 

 11 Climate change and human rights in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: REDD+ and the protection of the rights of indigenous peoples
Lassana Koné 

 12 The human right to a clean or healthy environment as an intervention to climate change in Mauritius
Roopanand Mahadew

 Selected bibliography


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