Attribution science and climate litigation: joining science and the law to protect human rights from climate change
Growing numbers of lawsuits have been filed around the world aiming to secure compensation for the impacts of climate change or to compel governments to strengthen climate targets. Many of these cases make causal claims about the effect of defendants’ greenhouse gas emissions on plaintiffs, for which the right scientific evidence may be crucial. In this event, we will bring together pioneering lawyers to explore the different legal strategies being deployed to protect human rights from the impacts of climate change, and the role science can play in supporting them. We will also present new research findings from the Oxford Sustainable Law Programme on the role of attribution-science evidence in climate litigation.

Panel members:
* Lavanya Rajamani, Professor of International Environmental Law, University of Oxford
* Dennis van Berkel, Director, Climate Litigation Network & Legal Counsel, Urgenda Foundation
* Fleur Ramsay, Special Counsel, International Programme & Chair of the First Nations and Indigenous Peoples Program Working Group, Environmental Defenders Office
* Rupert Stuart-Smith, Oxford Sustainable Law Programme & Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford

Following the panel discussion, we will introduce the work of the Oxford Sustainable Law Programme (SLP).
Date: 30 June 2021, 9:00
Venue: ONLINE
Speaker: Various Speakers
Organiser: Oxford Sustainable Law Programme
Booking required?: Required
Booking url: https://www.crowdcast.io/e/attribution-science-and-climate-litigation/register
Cost: Free
Audience: Members of the University only
Editors: Chris White, Donna Palfreman