SADCLJ: Special Issue 2012 – Climate Change: Annex II
SADCLJ: Special Issue 2012 – Climate Change: Annex II
Authors None
ISSN: 2026-8556
Affiliations: None
Source: SADC Law Journal, The, 2012, Issue 1, p. 122
Abstract
None
ISSN: 2026-8556
Affiliations: None
Source: SADC Law Journal, The, 2012, Issue 1, p. 122
None
ISSN: 2026-8556
Affiliations: None
Source: SADC Law Journal, The, 2012, Issue 1, p. 121
None
ISSN: 2026-8556
Affiliations: None
Source: SADC Law Journal, The, 2012, Issue 1, p. 98 – 120
None
ISSN: 2026-8556
Affiliations: Practising Attorney, Bayford & Associates; Lecturer, Law Department, University of Botswana
Source: SADC Law Journal, The, 2012, Issue 1, p. 78 – 97
Since 1992, when the first negotiations on climate change took place, no other single topic in the world has been given so much of policymakers’ time. The reason for issues surrounding global warming and climate change coming to the fore is not hard to find: it stems from the fact that, when greenhouse gas emissions are left unchecked, the future will be inhabitable. However, despite palpable threats presented by global warming and climate change, not much has been achieved in terms of abating greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere, with countries like the United States — which are the greatest producers of carbon dioxide emissions — refusing to commit themselves to the to the global quest to reduce such emissions. Clearly, the attitude of the United States and other like-minded states portends misery for the future. Unfortunately, the dire consequences of climate change resulting from actions of uncooperative states are felt most keenly in Africa because the developing world has a limited capacity to adapt. Global warming is a threat to humankind, on the African continent and beyond it, and calls for all states to devise multi-vector strategies and concentrate their efforts in combating this problem.
ISSN: 2026-8556
Affiliations: Works for UN Office of the High Commission for Human Rights, but writes in his own capacity
Source: SADC Law Journal, The, 2012, Issue 1, p. 55 – 77
This contribution examines the general impact of climate change on agro-biodiversity for a predominantly agro-based Southern African Development Community (SADC) economy. It contends that any efforts to deal with the adverse effects of climate change need to be focused at the SADC region level, considering that the effects of climate change would significantly vary from one region to the other. It is, therefore, argued that the geographic proximity of SADC states and the effects of climate change on the region’s common agenda identified by Article 5 of the SADC Treaty justify the need that any climate change interventions primarily need to focus on the specific needs of the region. On this point, the paper notes that almost all SADC Member States are party to the United Nations International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). The contribution argues that SADC Member States have an obligation under the fundamental right to freedom from hunger prescribed both by the ICESCR and the SADC Treaty to preserve agro-biodiversity as a tool to combat the adverse effects of climate change. The contribution further explores the options available for SADC to successfully respond to the effects of climate change by examining possible strategies for mitigation and adaptation.
ISSN: 2026-8556
Affiliations: Lecturer North-West University; None
Source: SADC Law Journal, The, 2012, Issue 1, p. 36 – 54
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