This collection explores the immediate implications for climate law and policy following the 27th Conference of Parties (COP27) and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) Sixth Assessment Report (AR6), released in a series of volumes beginning in late 2022. The short articles and essays in this collection examine new national commitments to mitigation; new national and international realities; emerging legal and policy strategies for adaptation at local, national, regional, and international scales; and unresolved policy issues, among other relevant topics. This Research Topic will focus on the broad policy implications of the IPCC Physical Science Basis Report, released in August 2021, and the COP27 proceedings in November 2022. It will also investigate the IPCC reports on adaptation and mitigation from early 2022, and it will encompass the final Synthesis Report from September 2022, including a focus on the next steps for national and international law and policy development.
The goal of this Research Topic is to provide a platform for the rapid publication of brief but insightful assessments of the law and policy implications of COP27 and the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report. The collection as a whole will constitute a convenient and accessible way for researchers to obtain in one location a diverse array of expert legal and policy analysis of the state and immediate future of climate change law and policy.
The scope of contributions suitable for Climate Law and Policy 2023 is as broad as the scope of COP27 and the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report, the focus of the collection being on implications for law and policy at all jurisdictional scales. Ideally, articles and essays will range from targeted on specific topics (e.g., border adjustments) to providing broad high-level assessments (e.g., ensuring adaptation equity). Short articles and essays are encouraged. Topics and themes include:
• Achieving new national commitments to mitigation
• Implementing the monetary funds for loss and damage committed to at COP 27
•Emerging legal and policy strategies for adaptation at local, national, regional, and international scales
• Implications of human migration
• Geoengineering
• Equity in mitigation and adaptation
• National and local adaptation planning frameworks
• Integrating the social cost of carbon into law and policy regimes
• Land use regulation for adaptation
• Carbon taxes
We are especially interested in Perspective pieces, including those that build on contributors’ prior commentary such as in blogs or op-eds.
This collection explores the immediate implications for climate law and policy following the 27th Conference of Parties (COP27) and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) Sixth Assessment Report (AR6), released in a series of volumes beginning in late 2022. The short articles and essays in this collection examine new national commitments to mitigation; new national and international realities; emerging legal and policy strategies for adaptation at local, national, regional, and international scales; and unresolved policy issues, among other relevant topics. This Research Topic will focus on the broad policy implications of the IPCC Physical Science Basis Report, released in August 2021, and the COP27 proceedings in November 2022. It will also investigate the IPCC reports on adaptation and mitigation from early 2022, and it will encompass the final Synthesis Report from September 2022, including a focus on the next steps for national and international law and policy development.
The goal of this Research Topic is to provide a platform for the rapid publication of brief but insightful assessments of the law and policy implications of COP27 and the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report. The collection as a whole will constitute a convenient and accessible way for researchers to obtain in one location a diverse array of expert legal and policy analysis of the state and immediate future of climate change law and policy.
The scope of contributions suitable for Climate Law and Policy 2023 is as broad as the scope of COP27 and the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report, the focus of the collection being on implications for law and policy at all jurisdictional scales. Ideally, articles and essays will range from targeted on specific topics (e.g., border adjustments) to providing broad high-level assessments (e.g., ensuring adaptation equity). Short articles and essays are encouraged. Topics and themes include:
• Achieving new national commitments to mitigation
• Implementing the monetary funds for loss and damage committed to at COP 27
•Emerging legal and policy strategies for adaptation at local, national, regional, and international scales
• Implications of human migration
• Geoengineering
• Equity in mitigation and adaptation
• National and local adaptation planning frameworks
• Integrating the social cost of carbon into law and policy regimes
• Land use regulation for adaptation
• Carbon taxes
We are especially interested in Perspective pieces, including those that build on contributors’ prior commentary such as in blogs or op-eds.