Book contents
- Climate Change Litigation in the Asia Pacific
- Climate Change Litigation in the Asia Pacific
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Theoretical Underpinnings and Implications of Climate Change Litigation
- Part II International Law and International Adjudication
- Part III Domestic Law and Domestic Adjudication
- 7 ‘Next Generation’ Climate Change Litigation in Australia
- 8 Climate Change Litigation: A Possibility for Malaysia?
- 9 Climate Change Litigation in Indonesia
- 10 From Shehla Zia to Asghar Leghari: Pronouncing Unwritten Rights Is More Complex than a Celebratory Tale
- 11 Climate Change Adaptation Litigation: A View from Southeast Asia
- Part IV China, Courts and Climate Change
- Index
11 - Climate Change Adaptation Litigation: A View from Southeast Asia
from Part III - Domestic Law and Domestic Adjudication
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 November 2020
- Climate Change Litigation in the Asia Pacific
- Climate Change Litigation in the Asia Pacific
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Theoretical Underpinnings and Implications of Climate Change Litigation
- Part II International Law and International Adjudication
- Part III Domestic Law and Domestic Adjudication
- 7 ‘Next Generation’ Climate Change Litigation in Australia
- 8 Climate Change Litigation: A Possibility for Malaysia?
- 9 Climate Change Litigation in Indonesia
- 10 From Shehla Zia to Asghar Leghari: Pronouncing Unwritten Rights Is More Complex than a Celebratory Tale
- 11 Climate Change Adaptation Litigation: A View from Southeast Asia
- Part IV China, Courts and Climate Change
- Index
Summary
Climate change poses serious adaptation challenges for countries in Southeast Asia, including how climate change impacts will be managed under environmental and planning law frameworks. At the same time. in Southeast Asia, climate change litigation involving questions of adaptation planning is at a nascent stage. There is also little research and scholarship on climate change legal developments in this part of the world. This chapter aims to evaluate prospects for adaptation-focused climate change litigation in Southeast Asia. It considers three key Southeast Asian jurisdictions – the Philippines, Malaysia and Singapore – which illustrate differing levels of receptivity to such cases given their existing legal frameworks and litigation cultures. With climate litigation in general at an early stage in these jurisdictions, this chapter attempts to draw lessons for further development of this body of case law from the more developed climate adaptation jurisprudence in neighbouring Australia. The chapter concludes with an assessment of the necessary preconditions for growth of climate adaptation litigation in the Southeast Asian region.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Climate Change Litigation in the Asia Pacific , pp. 294 - 328Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020
- 1
- Cited by