“We as Peoples Have the Right to Exist”: Threatened Nations and Climate Justice
: Vaha Milla Emilia
Publisher: University of British Columbia
: 2017
: Pacific Affairs
: 90
: 4
: 767
: 776
: 10
: 0030-851X
: 1715-3379
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5509/2017904767
Climate change currently affects several states and their citizens around
the globe. As sea level rise is threatening to make some states completely
uninhabitable, small island states serve as examples of states at the greatest
risk. This review essay analyzes three recent contributions to the literature
on climate change and the future of endangered populations. These books
offer timely contributions regarding the prospects of threatened nations, as
well as addressing the shape and content of global governance in the era of
Anthropocene. The authors suggest some interesting and novel innovations,
particularly for updating the international legislation surrounding climate
governance. At the same time, given how unpredictable a process climate
change is, the solutions we come up with should perhaps be bolder.