欧洲人权法院气候变化诉讼中个人的受害者地位

Antonio Mariconda
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摘要

欧洲人权法院(ECtHR)目前正在审理的气候变化申诉对斯特拉斯堡体系的现状提出了重大挑战,其中既包括案情问题,也包括可受理性问题。尤其令人担忧的是,这些案件是否符合《欧洲人权公约》第 34 条规定的受理要求,即申请人必须是一国违反公约行为的受害者,才能向法院提起诉讼。鉴于气候变化造成的损害具有分散性,确定个人是气候变化影响的受害者,进而确定其权利据称受到侵犯,成为一项复杂的任务。此外,在所遭受的损害与单一国家的作为或不作为之间建立直接因果关系也同样具有挑战性。因此,本文的目的是仔细研究这一可受理性要求在当前案件中可能如何运作。特别是,本文认为,尽管有一些注意事项,但根据欧洲人权法院判例法所确立的定义,将一些气候变化申请人视为直接和潜在受害者在法律上是可行的。然而,这一解决方案可能会对斯特拉斯堡制度的合法性和效率构成重大挑战,法院在裁决这些案件时必须防止出现这种情况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Victim Status of Individuals in Climate Change Litigation before the ECtHR
The climate change applications currently pending before the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) present substantial challenges to the status quo of the Strasbourg system, encompassing both merits and admissibility issues. Of particular concern is their compliance with the admissibility requirement outlined in Article 34 of the European Convention of Human Rights (echr), which stipulates that applicants must be victims of a violation of the Convention by a State to file a case before the Court. Given the diffuse nature of the harms stemming from climate change, identifying individuals as victims of its effects and, consequently, whose rights are allegedly infringed upon, becomes a complex task. Furthermore, establishing a direct causal link between the harm endured and the actions or omissions of a single State proves to be equally challenging. Therefore, the aim of this article is to scrutinize how this admissibility requirement might operate in the cases at hand. In particular, it argues that, albeit with some caveats, it is legally possible to consider some climate change applicants as both direct and potential victims, as per the definitions established by the case law of the ECtHR. Nevertheless, this solution could pose significant challenges to the legitimacy and efficiency of the Strasbourg system, which the Court will have to prevent when deciding these cases.
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