The Human Rights-Based Approach to Carbon Finance
Integrating Human Rights in Carbon Project Implementation
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:13th Dec '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This insightful book explores the integration of human rights into carbon finance, offering a framework for stakeholders to enhance ethical practices in project implementation.
In The Human Rights-Based Approach to Carbon Finance, Damilola S. Olawuyi presents a comprehensive framework designed for stakeholders involved in carbon, energy, and environmental investments. This framework emphasizes the integration of human rights into risk management processes, particularly during the design, approval, and implementation phases of carbon projects. By addressing the often contentious human rights impacts associated with these projects, especially in developing countries, the book offers critical insights into a subject that is both timely and significant.
The author meticulously analyzes the nature and scope of carbon projects, exploring the available legal options for financing them and identifying key human rights issues that arise during their planning and execution. Olawuyi advocates for a human rights-based approach to carbon finance, which serves as a functional framework for mainstreaming human rights considerations throughout all stages of carbon project development. This approach not only enhances the ethical dimensions of carbon finance but also aims to ensure that the rights of affected communities are respected and upheld.
Written in an accessible style, The Human Rights-Based Approach to Carbon Finance proposes a rights-based due diligence framework that enables stakeholders to anticipate and address human rights issues proactively. This makes the book an invaluable resource for anyone engaged in carbon, energy, and environmental projects, providing practical guidance on how to incorporate human rights into their operations and decision-making processes.
'Damilola S. Olawuyi has tackled the intersection of three issues of great complexity and even greater importance: the design of projects that are needed to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, and thus avoid the worst effects of climate change; the methods being used to pay for these projects; and the effect that the projects will have on the communities (often indigenous populations) that live in or near the places where these projects are carried out. This book displays a mastery of the actual problems these projects face in the real world … It also presents concrete proposals for reconciling at least some of the conflicts. Human rights and climate finance have too often been very separate spheres of study; Olawuyi has now brought them together in a way that performs a great service in helping us understand and constructively deal with the tensions between them.' Michael B. Gerrard, Andrew Sabin Professor of Professional Practice, and Director, Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, Columbia Law School
'This book is about the big issue in the transition to sustainability - the linking of equity with sustainability. No longer is it tolerable to focus only on environmental impact. Development must be approached and financed through the triple lens of environmental, social and economic sustainability … The book discusses what this means in practical terms - an expanded role for bodies presently engaged in screening carbon projects, a requirement for a specific human rights impact assessment, review mechanisms, better governance and compliance and complaints committees. Dr Damilola S. Olawuyi has written a clear, well-informed and documented work, in a field which should and does engage all of us ever more.' The Right Hon. The Lord Jonathan Hugh Mance, Justice of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom and Chair, International Law Association
ISBN: 9781107512849
Dimensions: 228mm x 151mm x 22mm
Weight: 620g
439 pages