{"title":"Using Climate Litigation to Strengthen Advocacy Strategies: The Life After Coal Campaign in South Africa","authors":"Lisa Chamberlain, Melissa Fourie","doi":"10.1093/jhuman/huad021","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract Activists in South Africa have a long history of using public interest litigation to realize human rights. The use of litigation is nevertheless contested and has produced rich scholarship exploring how its impact can be understood. This practice note will examine the use of litigation by the Life After Coal campaign in Earthlife Africa Johannesburg v. Minister of Environmental Affairs 2017, 2 All SA 519 (GP) (Thabametsi case). With the ultimate goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, Life After Coal has been campaigning since 2015 to thwart investment in new coal-fired power in South Africa. They successfully used the Thabametsi case to strengthen the use of a variety of other strategies, including protest, media advocacy, economic modelling, and pressure on investors and financial institutions. Although litigation can be painfully slow and resource intensive, in this campaign it was instrumental. Litigation delayed the regulatory approvals required for commercial close. While this was not the purpose of the litigation, its effect was to delay the flow of funds and the start of construction on the project. This in turn created time and space for an advocacy campaign to persuade financiers and investors to withdraw their backing for the project; to undertake the modelling and research required to back up the advocacy campaigns and litigation; and for clean renewable energy to become cheap enough to present a viable alternative pathway to coal. This practice note documents this rare success story and suggests what lessons concerning the use of multiple interweaving strategies it provides for climate activists in the global South.","PeriodicalId":45407,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Human Rights Practice","volume":"23 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Human Rights Practice","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/jhuman/huad021","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract Activists in South Africa have a long history of using public interest litigation to realize human rights. The use of litigation is nevertheless contested and has produced rich scholarship exploring how its impact can be understood. This practice note will examine the use of litigation by the Life After Coal campaign in Earthlife Africa Johannesburg v. Minister of Environmental Affairs 2017, 2 All SA 519 (GP) (Thabametsi case). With the ultimate goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, Life After Coal has been campaigning since 2015 to thwart investment in new coal-fired power in South Africa. They successfully used the Thabametsi case to strengthen the use of a variety of other strategies, including protest, media advocacy, economic modelling, and pressure on investors and financial institutions. Although litigation can be painfully slow and resource intensive, in this campaign it was instrumental. Litigation delayed the regulatory approvals required for commercial close. While this was not the purpose of the litigation, its effect was to delay the flow of funds and the start of construction on the project. This in turn created time and space for an advocacy campaign to persuade financiers and investors to withdraw their backing for the project; to undertake the modelling and research required to back up the advocacy campaigns and litigation; and for clean renewable energy to become cheap enough to present a viable alternative pathway to coal. This practice note documents this rare success story and suggests what lessons concerning the use of multiple interweaving strategies it provides for climate activists in the global South.
南非社会活动家利用公益诉讼实现人权的历史悠久。然而,诉讼的使用是有争议的,并产生了丰富的学术研究,探索如何理解其影响。本实践笔记将研究地球生命非洲约翰内斯堡诉环境事务部部长2017,2 All SA 519 (GP) (Thabametsi案)中“煤炭后的生活”运动的诉讼使用情况。自2015年以来,以减少温室气体排放为最终目标的“弃煤生活”一直在努力阻止南非投资新的燃煤发电项目。他们成功地利用Thabametsi案例,加强了其他各种策略的使用,包括抗议、媒体宣传、经济建模以及向投资者和金融机构施压。尽管诉讼过程缓慢且耗费大量资源,但在这场竞选中,它发挥了重要作用。诉讼推迟了商业交割所需的监管审批。虽然这不是诉讼的目的,但其影响是延迟资金的流动和项目的开工。这反过来又为游说活动创造了时间和空间,以说服金融家和投资者撤回对该项目的支持;进行所需的建模和研究,以支持宣传活动和诉讼;清洁的可再生能源变得足够便宜,为煤炭提供了一条可行的替代途径。本实践笔记记录了这一罕见的成功案例,并提出了它为全球南方的气候活动家提供的关于使用多种交织策略的经验教训。