A comparative study of the judicial construction of scientific credibility in climate litigation

IF 2 3区 社会学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Mingzhe Zhu, Liyuan Fan
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Abstract

Although the value of climate science in the courtroom is widely acknowledged, few studies have evaluated how judges achieve a scientifically sound grounding for their rulings. Drawing insights from legal culture and science and technology studies, we compare the determination of scientific credibility in leading climate cases in Europe and the United States. Judges on both sides of the Atlantic answer similar questions about scientific facts and commonly use authoritative reports and testimonies from qualified experts. However, while judges in the Netherlands, France and Germany find value in the political mandates of international or national bodies that generate scientific reports, American judges seek to keep scientific expertise from the influence of policy considerations. We make sense of this difference by identifying two competing ideals of expertise, namely the ‘view of everyone’ ideal in Europe and the ‘view from nowhere’ ideal in the United States. Although climate science is often articulated in universalist terms, the cultural embeddedness of adjudication means that the evaluation of credibility varies by jurisdiction.
气候诉讼中科学可信度的司法构建比较研究
尽管气候科学在法庭上的价值已得到广泛认可,但很少有研究对法官如何为其裁决提供科学依据进行评估。我们从法律文化和科技研究中汲取灵感,比较了欧洲和美国主要气候案件中对科学可信度的判定。大西洋两岸的法官在回答有关科学事实的类似问题时,通常会使用权威报告和合格专家的证词。然而,荷兰、法国和德国的法官认为国际或国家机构的政治任务对产生科学报告有价值,而美国的法官则力图使科学专业知识不受政策因素的影响。我们通过识别两种相互竞争的专业知识理想,即欧洲的 "人人观点 "理想和美国的 "无处观点 "理想,来理解这种差异。虽然气候科学经常以普遍主义的术语进行表述,但裁决的文化嵌入性意味着对可信度的评价因司法管辖区而异。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
8.70%
发文量
48
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