Article

Climate Change Litigation in Canada and the United States

July 15, 2009
Social Media
Download
Download
Read Mode
Subscribe
Summarize
This article examines the growing phenomenon of climate change litigation in the United States and Canada. It explores the expanding context in which this litigation is occurring and highlights key successes and failures of these actions. In the absence of a comprehensive federal framework in both countries, the article shows how litigation is being used by claimants to attempt to require government action in reducing greenhouse gas emissions and to force private entities to do the same and to pay damages. Whether a piecemeal approach to climate change engendered through litigation can provide a solution to this global issue remains to be seen. Published in RECIEL (Review of European Community & International Environmental Law) (18:2).
Social Media
Download
Download
Subscribe
Republishing Requests

For permission to republish this or any other publication, contact Peter Zvanitajs at ZvanitajsP@bennettjones.com.

For informational purposes only

This publication provides an overview of legal trends and updates for informational purposes only. For personalized legal advice, please contact the authors.

Latest Insights

See All Insights
Hiding in the Shadows The Perils of Shadow AI on Your Organization
Blog

Hiding in the Shadows: The Perils of Shadow AI on Your Organization

January 10, 2026
J. Sébastien A. GittensStephen D. BurnsAhmed Elmallah
J. Sébastien A. Gittens, Stephen D. Burns & Ahmed Elmallah
Placeholder
Blog

Alberta Court of Appeal Clarifies PPSA Priorities in Insolvency Sales

January 7, 2026
Denise D. BrightKeely CameronChyna Brown
Denise D. Bright, Keely Cameron & Chyna Brown
Placeholder
Article

The Canadian Class Actions Handbook

December 25, 2025
Michael A. Eizenga L.S.M.Pascale Dionne-BourassaKatherine Booth
Michael A. Eizenga L.S.M., Pascale Dionne-Bourassa & Katherine Booth