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Climate Attribution Litigation: Holding Emitters Accountable

気候変動帰属訴訟:排出者への責任追及 (AI 翻訳)

Novera Bhatti

International Journal of Law and Societal Studies📚 査読済 / ジャーナル2026-03-10#政策Origin: Global
DOI: 10.61424/ijlss.v3i1.744
原典: https://doi.org/10.61424/ijlss.v3i1.744

🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本論文は、気候変動の被害と排出者との因果関係を法的に立証する理論モデルを提示する。帰属科学、不法行為法、企業の知識・欺瞞理論、ガバナンス理論を統合し、排出者責任の枠組みを構築。4つの概念的発見(因果法的責任連鎖、法的障壁の類型・理論的解決、知識-欺瞞-責任の連関、損失と損害の修復的アーキテクチャ)を導出し、気候変動訴訟を構造的執行手段へと昇華させる可能性を示す。

English

This article develops a theoretical framework for holding major emitters accountable for climate damages by integrating attribution science, tort law, corporate knowledge-deception theory, and governance theory. It identifies four conceptual findings: a causal-legal accountability chain, a typology of legal barriers and resolutions, the knowledge-deception-liability nexus, and a reparative architecture for loss and damage. The model positions attribution litigation as a structural tool for climate accountability.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

日本では気候変動訴訟はまだ限定的だが、本論文の理論枠組みは、今後の国内訴訟や規制設計に示唆を与える。特に、企業の排出情報開示(SSBJ等)と因果関係立証の連携は、日本版気候ガバナンスの進展に寄与する可能性がある。

In the global GX context

This framework directly addresses the global gap in legal accountability for carbon majors, relevant to jurisdictions like the EU, US, and developing countries facing climate losses. It strengthens the case for integrating attribution science into litigation, influencing climate justice and regulation design worldwide.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Provides a novel theoretical model connecting attribution science, tort law, corporate liability, and governance for emitter accountability.

🏢実務担当者:Offers legal and corporate teams a structured approach to anticipate or prepare for climate attribution litigation.

🏛政策担当者:Highlights how attribution litigation can become a regulatory tool, informing climate policy and loss-and-damage mechanisms.

📄 Abstract(原文)

This is the absence of accountability between massive carbon emissions by industrial activities and the reported climate damage, which is one of the most impactful governance failures of modern times. Although the scientific evidence of most anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions can be traced to a few identifiable producers of fossil fuels, the so-called carbon majors have theoretically immature and practically inadequate legal mechanisms through which the afflicted communities could seek redress, and have been fragmented. The article fills a key theoretical gap in the current body of literature: the literature on attribution science, climate litigation, corporate accountability, and climate governance has proceeded to develop individually, but no single theoretical model has ever brought together these four strands into a consistent accountability structure of emitter accountability. This article creates such a framework by relying on a systematic conceptual review of peer-reviewed scholarship in environmental law, climate science, governance theory, and tort doctrine. It is theorized that, when incorporated with the changing legal standards in causation and corporate knowledge-liability theory and climate governance theory, climate attribution science facilitates the creation of a plausible and analytically sound attribution chain between large emitters and reported climate damage and actionable claims to remedy. The article connotes four conceptual findings: causal-legal accountability chain; the typology of legal barriers and the theoretical resolutions; the nexus of corporate knowledge-deception-liability; and the reparative architecture in loss and damage with legal redress. These results are pulled together into a coherent and multi-strand theoretical model of emitter accountability arranged into four analytically separate strands of scientific accountability based on attribution, legal accountability based on tort and human rights, moral accountability based on the knowledge-deception nexus, and governance accountability based on litigation as a regulatory tool. With the rising development of attribution science and increasing judicial faith in probabilistic causal evidence, attribution litigation targeting climate change has an opportunity to rapidly become not just a fringe enforcement tool, but a structural-level implementative instrument of climate accountability with implications to both legal science and climate justice movement, and global regulation design.

🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース

gxceed は公開メタデータに基づく研究支援データセットです。要約・翻訳・解説は AI 支援で生成されています。 最終的な解釈・検証は利用者が原典資料に基づいて行うことを前提とします。