Kate Bermingham reports on how the law is being used to make up for climate change failure, as three major cases heading towards the ECHR
Climate Change
Rachel Donald talks to scientists and activists who are turning to protest because of the gate-keepers in the media who refuse to cover their research
There are concerns that the project will tie Uganda, Tanzania and East African countries to fossil fuels at the expense of a robust, diverse and lasting green economies
Josiah Mortimer reports on a spree of arrests of peaceful protestors in the capital
In Tuesday’s fiscal statement, the Australian government made a lot of noise about dealing with the climate emergency that the nation faces but in terms of hard fiscal outlays or initiatives it did very little, deferring action again, while ‘the place burns’. The Climate Council assessment was that the government “still seems to be on…
“As long as we labour under the delusion that financial choices are the same for a government as they are for households or firms, who don’t have a [central] bank …
The post Two worlds. Royalty shamelessly flaunts its wealth while the people struggle to live. appeared first on The Gower Initiative for Modern Money Studies.
A number of barristers are speaking out against the 'cab rank' rule, under which advocates have to accept any case that lands on their desks, faced with their concerns about the climate emergency
The blue state could become the 20th in the U.S. to enact a so-called critical infrastructure law.
The post A New Bill in Oregon Could Target Environmental Protesters as Terrorists appeared first on scheerpost.com.
The established media has been determined to stir up concerns that XR's big four-day action will disrupt the London Marathon, writes Stephen Colegrave
Prolonged inaction on climate change has left those at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder exposed to the fluctuations of an unpredictable global market, writes Thomas Perrett