Verfassungsblog (Apr 2024)

The European Court of Human Rights’ April 9 Climate Rulings and the Future (Thereof)

  • Anaïs Brucher,
  • Antoine De Spiegeleir

DOI
https://doi.org/10.59704/c4cb114ae7b5231f
Journal volume & issue
no. 2366-7044

Abstract

Read online

By recognizing the responsibility they have toward future individuals who will be standing in their shoes, current decision-makers are encouraged to adopt long-term perspectives and consider the broader implications of their actions beyond the immediate. This responsibility is echoed in numerous statements by the ECtHR in its rulings about how it understands its own role in European society and the world, and about the deference it believes it owes to domestic decision-makers on the one hand, and to its own past and future work on the other hand. In this light, the ECtHR has struck a pragmatic yet slightly cynical balance between the great demands it was faced with and the great responsibilities it owes to European citizens, to other institutions, and to itself.

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