Distributive Justice, Competitiveness, and Transnational Climate Protection: “One Human – One Emission Right” journal article Felix Ekardt, Antonia von Hövel Carbon & Climate Law Review, Volume 3 (2009), Issue 1, Page 12 s about national and European climate policies are increasingly facing a major obstacle: how can climate policy be advanced without detrimental effects for (national or global) social distributive justice and how can this “socially compatible climate policy” be reconciled with competitiveness concerns in a liberalized global market, particularly in the case of European climate policy if it starts to serve as a model for global climate policy? And how can this lead to a stringent, effective, and fair global climate protection regime for the peri
Reparations For Climate Harm and The Role of The Loss and Damage Mechanism: Lessons from Other Areas of Law Oscar Davison