Letteratura scientifica selezionata sul tema "Cambiamento climatico e diritti umani"
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Articoli di riviste sul tema "Cambiamento climatico e diritti umani"
Mulgan, Tim. "Teoria etica e intuizioni in un mondo in frantumi". SOCIETÀ DEGLI INDIVIDUI (LA), n. 39 (gennaio 2011): 44–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/las2010-039004.
Testo completodell’Agnese, Elena. "La Climate Fiction secondo l'Ecocritical Geopolitics: un'agenda per la ricerca". RIVISTA GEOGRAFICA ITALIANA, n. 2 (maggio 2022): 110–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/rgioa2-2022oa13805.
Testo completoPaoloni, Lorenza. "Farmers' Rights, tutela della biodiversitĂ e salvaguardia delle risorse genetiche: l'esperienza del Canada". AGRICOLTURA ISTITUZIONI MERCATI, n. 3 (marzo 2011): 11–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/aim2009-003002.
Testo completoBerti, Giaime, Federico Cuomo, Egidio Dansero, Saverio Di Benedetto, Francesca Galli, Simona Monteleone e Giacomo Pettenati. "Le Food policy in una prospettiva multi e transcalare". RIVISTA GEOGRAFICA ITALIANA, n. 4 (dicembre 2023): 17–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/rgioa4-2023oa16843.
Testo completoStrambi, Giuliana. "L’agricoltura contadina fra istanze locali e globali". Przegląd Prawa Rolnego, n. 2(29) (30 dicembre 2021): 461–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/ppr.2021.29.2.23.
Testo completoMartignoni, Matteo. "Strategie di progettazione culturale per lo sviluppo territoriale attraverso l'uso di blockchain e NFT". WELFARE E ERGONOMIA 9, n. 1 (agosto 2023): 167–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/we2023-001014.
Testo completoMaria Samuelli, Anna. "Il diritto dei più vulnerabili e dei più deboli non è un diritto debole: povertà e difficoltà educative nel tempo della pandemia". MINORIGIUSTIZIA, n. 4 (giugno 2021): 27–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/mg2020-004003.
Testo completoDammacco, Gaetano. "Riflessioni sul diritto di satira e i suoi limiti". Studia z Prawa Wyznaniowego 23 (30 dicembre 2020): 101–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.31743/spw.10355.
Testo completoSpoto, Giuseppe. "Luci e ombre del sistema multilaterale degli accordi internazionali sul commercio dei prodotti agricoli". Przegląd Prawa Rolnego, n. 2(29) (30 dicembre 2021): 423–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/ppr.2021.29.2.22.
Testo completoPizzorni, Maria, Ombretta Caldarice e Nicola Tollin. "A methodological framework to assess the urban content in climate change policies". Valori e Valutazioni 29 (gennaio 2022): 123–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.48264/vvsiev-20212909.
Testo completoTesi sul tema "Cambiamento climatico e diritti umani"
DI, PIERRI Marica. "Cambiamenti climatici e diritti umani. Il paradigma della Giustizia climatica e il ruolo delle climate litigations per la protezione dei diritti umani nel contesto clima-alterato". Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Palermo, 2021. https://hdl.handle.net/10447/514951.
Testo completoTo what extent do the increasingly widespread, pervasive and dramatic impacts of climate change, jeopardise the resilience of the universally recognised human rights system? This research aims to discuss climate change challenges and what legal instruments are currently available to guarantee the full protection of fundamental rights in the new climate-altered context. The anthropogenic nature of climate change is a fundamental ground of this research: the relevance of the climate emergency in the current global scenario is in fact documented by decades of scientific evidence and series of accredited data, systematised and disseminated by research entities and international organisations. The review of the large number of available reports and the selection of the most relevant and accredited data constitute the skeleton of solid evidence on which this research is based. Since The Limits to Growth Report in 1972, countless publications have highlighted the dangers posed by the environmental incompatibility of the economic model with the full protection of human rights. Climate change emphasizes such incompatibility and increasingly threatens the enjoyment of most fundamental rights, including the right to life, health, a healthy environment, food, clean water and self-determination. International organisations, including the UN Human Rights Council, have affirmed and recognised that climate impacts have direct and indirect implications on the effective enjoyment of universal rights. For at least two decades, the United Nations, through its agencies, bodies and activities, have been trying to induce member states to coordinate and multiply their efforts to combat climate change to guarantee the protection of climate-related rights. Following the evolution of the human right to a healthy environment, the doctrinal discussion that arose around the emerging need for protection has been oriented towards the reinterpretation of existing cases in the light of current climate profiles. Alongside this effort of re-signification and specification, the push, coming from many sources, for the recognition of a specific "human right to a safe climate" appears very relevant. The theoretical register through which the analytical reading of the process of affirmation of the new demands is presented is that of Political Ecology, which provides an integrated approach to the reading of environmental issues, using elements of analysis borrowed from sociological and anthropological studies, political science, economics and legal science. Such perspective responds to the need to highlight the connections between political, social and economic factors and ecological challenges, paying particular attention to the effects of environmental threats in terms of justice, discrimination, socio-economic impoverishment and the role of social actors. This relationship is particularly relevant for the full understanding of the climate change phenomenon (both in terms of asymmetry of responsibilities and asymmetry of impacts) and for the identification of effective responses to counter the multiple social implications of global warming. The same kind of integrated perspective between environment, rights, vulnerability, social, political and economic factors, although with different origins and aims in principle, has led to the affirmation of the paradigm of first Environmental Justice and then Climate Justice. These notions are based on the observation of an unequal distribution of environmental and climate risks and impacts - which systematically penalises the most vulnerable sectors of the world's population with greater severity - and constitute the theoretical reference for this study. From a more strictly legal point of view, in addition to the reconstruction of the main stages of the international debate on the relationship between human beings and the environment, this research traces the path that led from the affirmation of the concept of sustainable development to the possibility of legally qualifying - and defend in court - the rights of future generations. The focal point of the excursus is the examination - with particular reference to the documents drawn up by UN bodies (Human Rights Council, General Assembly, Special Rapporteurs' Reports, etc.) - of the stratified links between climate change and the protection of human rights, as well as the existence and configurability of a human right to a stable and safe climate. The legal foundations, the contents and the potential in terms of effectiveness of the protection of such a right are widely argued in this study. The declination of the link between human rights and climate change through the recognition of a specific human right to a safe climate becomes stronger also in the light of the importance assumed by the judicial route to climate justice. In the last decade, legal actions in the climate field have become a tool for claiming and asserting the protection of individuals and communities from the impacts of climate change, used by civil society with increasing frequency and capillarity. The aforementioned scientific evidence shows that a drastic and rapid reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions is essential to avoid an irreversible imbalance in the climate system and to avert the consequences that ensue. Despite the international instruments in place and the existing national regulations, GHG emissions’ reduction has not yet taken place, a sign of the widespread inertia that is incompatible with a timely reversal of climate change. Consequently, this type of legal dispute aims to involve judicial bodies by calling on judges to play an active role in combating global warming. The examination of the theoretical orientations and the in-depth study of the different legal approaches and cultures from the vast and constantly evolving field of climate litigation, carried out by means of an extensive international cases study, traces a comprehensive overview of the new legal field, highlighting its relevance, trends, challenges, legal issues and perspectives. The rethinking of the role of law as a function of the containment of uncertainties about the future posed by climate change appears to be a central perspective to which this study aims to contribute; the basic question to be addressed is whether in a legal system capable of fully reflecting the scope of such urgency, climate inaction can be considered a violation of human rights and with what consequences. In a multi-dimensional climate governance system, climate litigation stands as a new and useful element and constitutes a valuable tool for the realisation of Climate Justice.
VONA, FABRIZIO. "Contenzioso climatico e diritti umani: origini, norme e prassi del ‘rights turn’". Doctoral thesis, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/11573/1549430.
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