Climate Refugees in South Asia : Protection Under International Legal Standards and State Practices in South Asia / Stellina Jolly and Nafees Ahmad
Material type:
- 9789811331367
- 23rd 341.4860954 JOL
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reference Book | VIT AP School of Law LAW Section | Reference | 341.4860954 JOL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | LA01512 | Not For Loan (Restricted Access) | LAW | 020364 |
It includes Acknowledgements, Contents, about the author and Abbreviations etc.
About this book
This book addresses the forms of legal protection extended to people displaced due to the consequences of climate change, and who have either become refugees by crossing international borders or are climatically displaced persons (CDPs) in their own homelands. It explores the legal response of the South Asian Jurisdictions to these refugee-like situations, and also to what extent these people are protected under current international law. The book critically examines and assesses whether States have obligations to protect people displaced by climate change under international refugee law (IRL) and international climate change law (ICCL). It discusses the issue of climate migration in South Asia, analyzes the legal and judicial response initiated by South Asian nations, and also investigates the role of SAARC in relation to climate change and climate refugees.
Drawing on the International Legal Standards and States’ Practices in South Asia regarding climate refugees, the book shows how IRL, ICCL, and IHRL (international human rights law) have been used to address and identify the gaps in the global legal protection framework concerning the contours of the normative debate on climate refugees, climate change displacement, migration, forced migration, susceptibility to climate change, typology of climate change-induced displacement, role of the SAARC and its municipal legal systems, approaches to climate change, human mobility and developing a hybrid regional law, or advocating a legal alternative of equal measure in a region characterized by diversity and multiculturalism. The book offers valuable takeaways for students, researchers, consultants, practitioners and policymakers alike.
Table of contents (7 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xvi
PDF
Introduction
Stellina Jolly, Nafees Ahmad
Pages 1-14
Conceptualizing the Climate Change Migration in South Asia
Stellina Jolly, Nafees Ahmad
Pages 15-45
Climate Change Displacement and Refugees: ‘Normative Debate’
Stellina Jolly, Nafees Ahmad
Pages 47-78
Climate Change Migration: Legal Protection Under International Refugee Law and Climate Change Legal Regime
Stellina Jolly, Nafees Ahmad
Pages 79-121
Climate Refugees: South Asian States’ Legal Protection Practices
Stellina Jolly, Nafees Ahmad
Pages 123-201
Climate Refugees: The Role of South Asian Judiciaries in Protecting the Climate Refugees
Stellina Jolly, Nafees Ahmad
Pages 203-254
The Role of the SAARC: Way Forward
Stellina Jolly, Nafees Ahmad
Pages 255-288
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