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The Third Pillar of International Climate Change Policy: On ‘Loss and Damage’ after the Paris Agreement

Author: Morten Broberg; Beatriz Martinez Romera |

11,700.00

On ‘Loss and Damage’ after the Paris Agreement

Additional information

Weight 1 kg
Dimensions 47.5 × 37 × 1 cm
ISBN

9780367676681

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Ltd

Format

Hardback

Publishing Date

8-Jun-21

SKU: TMP_PUB_2285 Category: Tags: , , , Product ID: 25405

Description

During the negotiations in 2015 that led to the adoption of the Paris Agreement, one of the most contentious issues was the introduction of a dedicated provision in Article 8 on what is known as ‘loss and damage’. The adoption of this new article, however, left many questions unanswered. What is the distinction between ‘loss and damage’, and ‘adaptation’? What are the legal implications of the inclusion of loss and damage as an article in a legal treaty? How can financial assistance and compensation best be channelled to victims of climate change loss and damage? What gaps remain in the loss and damage governance system?

The Third Pillar of International Climate Change Policy: On ‘Loss and Damage’ after the Paris Agreement addresses these questions, and numerous others, and explores the present and future of loss and damage in the era of the Paris Agreement. This book provides an up-to-date analysis of ‘loss and damage’ which is often described as the third pillar of international climate change policy. It is based around four main themes: (i) insurance schemes, (ii) key gaps in loss and damage governance, including non-economic loss and damage and slow-onset events, (iii) legal aspects of loss and damage, and (iv) novel approaches to loss and damage.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Climate Policy.

 

Table of Contents

 

Introduction: Loss and Damage after Paris: All Talk and No Action?

Morten Broberg and Beatriz Martinez Romera

1. Insurance schemes for loss and damage: fools’ gold?

Linnéa Nordlander, Melanie Pill and Beatriz Martinez Romera

2. Parametric loss and damage insurance schemes as a means to enhance climate change resilience in developing countries

Morten Broberg

3. Non-economic loss and damage: lessons from displacement in the Caribbean

Adelle Thomas and Lisa Benjamin

4. Loss and damage in the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report (Working Group II): a text-mining analysis

Kees van der Geest and Koko Warner

5. Loss & damage from climate change: from concept to remedy?

Meinhard Doelle and Sara Seck

6. Between negotiations and litigation: Vanuatu’s perspective on loss and damage from climate change

Margaretha Wewerinke-Singh and Diana Hinge Salili

7. Interpreting the UNFCCC’s provisions on ‘mitigation’ and ‘adaptation’ in light of the Paris Agreement’s provision on ‘loss and damage’

Morten Broberg

8. A human rights-based approach to loss and damage under the climate change regime

Patrick Toussaint and Adrian Martínez Blanco

9. Loss and damage: an opportunity for transformation?

Erin Roberts and Mark Pelling