Abstract This analysis departs from doctrinal exegesis of the International Court of Justice’s Advisory Opinion on climate change to reflect, from the cockpit of the process that produced it, on how impact was conceived throughout the campaign, the drafting of the request, and the conduct of the proceedings. It explains that a central strategic objective was not simply to secure a symbolically powerful statement of law, but to trigger legal tipping points within domestic systems. Four such tipping points were given close consideration: the individualization of the relevant conduct; the integration of cumulative and downstream effects into project-level assessment of new fossil fuel developments; the clarification of adaptation obligations and their distributive implications; and the harnessing of human rights law as a vehicle for domestic remedies, including claims concerned with reparation.
Wewerinke‐Singh et al. (Wed,) studied this question.