By Hon. Prof. Kariuki Muigua, OGW, PhD, C.Arb, FCIArb is a Professor of Environmental Law and Dispute Resolution at the University of Nairobi, Member of Permanent Court of Arbitration, Leading Environmental Law Scholar, Respected Sustainable Development Policy Advisor, Top Natural Resources Lawyer, Highly-Regarded Dispute Resolution Expert and Awardee of the Order of Grand Warrior (OGW) of Kenya by H.E. the President of Republic of Kenya. He is The African ADR Practitioner of the Year 2022, The African Arbitrator of the Year 2022, ADR Practitioner of the Year in Kenya 2021, CIArb (Kenya) Lifetime Achievement Award 2021 and ADR Publisher of the Year 2021 and Author of the Kenya’s First ESG Book: Embracing Environmental Social and Governance (ESG) tenets for Sustainable Development” (Glenwood, Nairobi, July 2023) and Kenya’s First Two Climate Change Law Book: Combating Climate Change for Sustainability (Glenwood, Nairobi, October 2023), Achieving Climate Justice for Development (Glenwood, Nairobi, October 2023) and Promoting Rule of Law for Sustainable Development (Glenwood, Nairobi, January 2024)*
In designing appropriate responses to climate change, it needs to be acknowledged that the people who have contributed least to the changing climate are being affected by it the most, and are likely to be less able to protect themselves from the impacts. The climate crisis therefore brings enormous injustices. Effective climate action therefore envisages the participation of the people and communities most impacted by climate change including developing countries, indigenous communities, women and children as part of the climate solution in order to foster climate justice. The idea of just transition has been proposed as one of the key ways of achieving climate justice.
Climate justice is a concept that frames climate change as an ethical and political issue, rather than one that is purely environmental or physical in nature. This is done by relating the effects of climate change to concepts of justice, particularly environmental justice and social justice and by examining issues such as equality, human rights; collective rights, and the historical responsibilities for climate. It has been observed that the climate crisis brings enormous injustices since it affects everyone, but not equally.
Further, it has been stated that the people and communities who have contributed least to climate change are being affected by it the most, and are likely to be less able to protect themselves from its impacts. For example, it has been highlighted that developed countries mainly the large industrialised economies of Europe and North America and some Asian countries such as China continue to benefit more from the industries and technologies that cause climate change while developing nations in places such as Africa, Asia, the Caribbean Islands and the Pacific Islands which due to an unfortunate mixture of economic and geographic vulnerability, continue to shoulder the brunt of the burdens of climate change despite their relative innocence in causing it. These countries are more vulnerable to adverse impacts of climate change including severe flooding, intense droughts, sea level rise, increasing temperatures and frequency and intensity of tropical cyclones, and storm surges despite their very little contribution to the climate change problem.
Climate justice acknowledges that while climate change is global, the poor are disproportionately vulnerable to its effects. This is due to the fact that they lack the resources to afford goods and services they need to buffer themselves and recover from the effects of climate change. As a result of these concerns, there have been calls for climate justice as evidence increases of the environmental and social injustices caused or worsened by climate change. Climate justice fundamentally is about paying attention to how climate change impacts people differently, unevenly, and disproportionately, as well as redressing the resultant injustices in fair and equitable ways.
Climate justice envisages understating climate change as an issue that relates to equity, fairness, ethics and human rights and not just an environmental phenomena. It links human rights and development to achieve a human-centred approach, safeguarding the rights of the most vulnerable people and sharing the burdens and benefits of climate change and its impacts equitably and fairly. The goals of climate justice are to reduce marginalization, exploitation, and oppression, and enhance equity and justice in climate action. Climate justice therefore seeks to put equity and human rights at the core of decision-making and action on climate change.
Climate justice encapsulates various facets of justice including distributive, procedural, and justice as recognition. Distributive justice involves identifying and acknowledging the disproportionate impacts that climate change is already having and will continue to have on the people, communities and countries that are least responsible for climate change but which bear the full brunt of its devastating impacts; Procedural justice aims to address distributive injustices by tackling climate change through processes that are participatory, accessible, fair and inclusive; while justice as recognition refers to the importance of centering the voices of people who have traditionally been marginalised through structural inequality.
Climate Justice is guided by several principles including the protection and empowering of vulnerable individuals and communities, promoting public participation in decision making in climate action, fostering global collaboration in the response to climate change, achieving intergeneration equity in order to protect future generations from the effects of climate change and assigning of responsibility to nations that contribute most to global greenhouse gas emissions. Climate justice is therefore an important component of the Sustainable Development agenda. It seeks to address the causes and impacts of climate change in a manner that recognizes and fosters the rights and concerns of vulnerable people, communities and countries. Climate justice is therefore essential in tackling climate change. It has been rightly pointed out that climate justice is also an important aspect of just transition toward a sustainable future.
*This is an extract from the Book: Promoting Rule of Law for Sustainable Development (Glenwood, Nairobi, January 2024) by Hon. Prof. Kariuki Muigua, OGW, PhD, Professor of Environmental Law and Dispute Resolution, Senior Advocate of Kenya, Chartered Arbitrator, Kenya’s ADR Practitioner of the Year 2021 (Nairobi Legal Awards), ADR Lifetime Achievement Award 2021 (CIArb Kenya), African Arbitrator of the Year 2022, Africa ADR Practitioner of the Year 2022, Member of National Environment Tribunal (NET) Emeritus (2017 to 2023) and Member of Permanent Court of Arbitration nominated by Republic of Kenya. Prof. Kariuki Muigua is a foremost Environmental Law and Natural Resources Lawyer and Scholar, Sustainable Development Advocate and Conflict Management Expert in Kenya. Prof. Kariuki Muigua teaches Environmental Law and Dispute resolution at the University of Nairobi School of Law, The Center for Advanced Studies in Environmental Law and Policy (CASELAP) and Wangari Maathai Institute for Peace and Environmental Studies. He has published numerous books and articles on Environmental Law, Environmental Justice Conflict Management, Alternative Dispute Resolution and Sustainable Development. Prof. Muigua is also a Chartered Arbitrator, an Accredited Mediator, the Managing Partner of Kariuki Muigua & Co. Advocates and Africa Trustee Emeritus of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators 2019-2022. Prof. Muigua is a 2023 recipient of President of the Republic of Kenya Order of Grand Warrior (OGW) Award for his service to the Nation as a Distinguished Expert, Academic and Scholar in Dispute Resolution and recognized among the top 5 leading lawyers and dispute resolution experts in Band 1 in Kenya by the Chambers Global Guide 2024 and was listed in the Inaugural THE LAWYER AFRICA Litigation Hall of Fame 2023 as one of the Top 50 Most Distinguished Litigation Lawyers in Kenya and the Top Arbitrator in Kenya in 2023.
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