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DTSTART:19960101T000000 END:STANDARD BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:GMT TZOFFSETFROM:+0100 TZOFFSETTO:+0000 DTSTART:19961027T020000 RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=10;BYDAY=-1SU END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20260609T164023Z DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20251010T120000 DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20251010T140000 SUMMARY:Being Present to Climate Change: Inheritance\, Repair and the Res tless Work of Justice TZID:Europe/London UID:20251010-8ac672c49956c0b8019959157f1d09de@warwick.ac.uk CREATED:20251006T111035Z DESCRIPTION:About the Event: Our lands\, waters\, and bodies carry the la yered scars of colonisation\, extraction\, and broken promises. We inher it more than land — we inherit unpaid debts and silenced histories\, car ried not only in archives but in our bloodlines\, in the songs\, struggl es\, and silences passed down to us. From the rice paddies of displaced villages in the Philippines to the coal mines of Indonesia and the oil p ipelines of Canada\, from Palestine’s besieged farmlands to the industri al corridors of China\, our ancestors bore the first wounds of stolen la bour\, poisoned soil\, and stolen futures. To be present to this inherit ance is to feel the weight of unfinished work. It is to recognise that r epair cannot begin without truth-telling\, atonement\, and the dismantli ng of the systems that continue to harm. In conversation with Lisa Tille yLink opens in a new window (Department of Development Studies\, SOAS)\, whose work explores key sites of colonial/capitalist expansion – the pl antation\, the mine\, the smelter\, and the city – and the intersections of race and political ecology\, Mohammed UsrofLink opens in a new windo w (Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy) whose advocacy links clim ate resilience to the struggle against occupation\; Joy ReyesLink opens in a new window (Manila Observatory) who has worked at the forefront of climate litigation in the Philippines and beyond\, Sahar ShahLink opens in a new window (Bristol Law School) whose work unsettles the law and co lonial narratives of extraction in Canadian tar sands and Anil Yilmaz-Va stardisLink opens in a new window (Essex Law School) whose work challeng es the complicity of corporations in the climate and environmental crisi s — we ask: When harm is both historic and unfolding\, what does atoneme nt require from those who benefit from it? How do we unmask and refuse t he ‘false solutions\,’ carbon trading\, toxic exports\, green growth nar ratives and cultivate alternatives that are rooted in sovereignty and re parative justice? What would it mean to treat repair not as charity or c orporate responsibility\, but as a binding\, transnational\, intergenera tional debt to transform the systems that make this harm possible? What legal pathways and non-legal pathways can be used to seek these reparati ons and accountability? Together\, we will explore what it means to tend the circle\; to commit to the restless\, patient\, and global work of j ustice\, where being present is both inheritance and responsibility. Mod erators: Jodi-Ann WangLink opens in a new window (Oxford Department for International Development) and Celine Tan (Warwick Law School). About th e Speakers: Dr Lisa TilleyLink opens in a new window is Senior Lecturer in Development Studies at SOAS\, University of London. At present\, Lisa is working on the extraction and processing of nickel for the electrifi cation of vehicle markets\, with a particular focus on the sacrificial s ocioecologies these processes produce. She is also finishing a book on L iberation Ecology for Pluto Press.Lisa’s wider research is mainly anchor ed in critical approaches to political ecology and political economy wit h particular attention to structures of race\, gender\, and class. Moham med Usrof Link opens in a new windowis a Palestinian researcher\, climat e justice advocate\, and political strategist from Khan Yunis\, Gaza. He is the Founder and Executive Director of the Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy (PICS)Link opens in a new window. His work focuses on t he intersection of energy justice\, environmental governance\, and decol onization\, particularly within the context of settler colonialism\, mil itary occupation\, and systemic de-development in Palestine and the broa der Middle East. Joy ReyesLink opens in a new window is a Filipina clima te justice activist and lawyer. She is a Policy Officer Policy Officer i n Climate AttributionLink opens in a new window at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics and a Technical Advisor with the Manila ObservatoryLink opens in a new window. She has worked on on the intersections of environmenta l and human rights\, just energy transition\, and the United Nations Fra mework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) processes\, particularly on loss and damage with a feminist and decolonial lens. Dr Sahar ShahLink opens in a new window is Lecturer in Law at Bristol Law School\, Univers ity fo Bristol. Her research focuses on the intersections between climat e change and jurisprudence\, with a focus on critical legal studies and anti-colonial theory. Her doctoral research considered these in the cont ext of recent Canadian tar sands legal cases involving Indigenous and Ca nadian state actors. Dr Anil Yilmaz VastardisLink opens in a new window is Honorary Associate Professor at the GLOBE CentreLink opens in a new w indow\, Warwick Law School. She is Senior Lecturer at Essex Law School a nd the Co-Director of the Essex Business and Human Rights Project. Her m ain research interests are in the fields of international investment law and business and human rights. Her research addresses the relationship between corporate law\, international investment law\, human rights law\ , and tort law\, examining how these areas can and should interact so as to operationalise human rights standards in the modern business context . Jodi-Ann WangLink opens in a new window is a DPhil candidate in Intern ational Development and a member of St Hughs College\, University of Oxf ord. Her DPhil project investigates the rise and fixation of financialis ed capital as a promised solution to the global climate crisis\, how thi s came to be\, and what this means for climate justice.She is also a Glo bal Policy Fellow at the Just Transition Finance Lab Link opens in a new window at the LSE Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and Env ironment. Professor Celine TanLink opens in a new window is Professor of International Economic Law at the ÉñÂí¸£ÀûӰƬ and a Co-Direct or of the GLOBE CentreLink opens in a new window\, Warwick Law School. S he is leads a project on Climate Finance for Equitable Transitions (CLiF T)\, a multi-institutional and multi-stakeholder initiative aimed at exp loring the climate finance supply chain within the context of the multil ateral climate change regime\, international financial architecture and the multi-layered landscape of international economic law. She is Co-Con vener of the Warwick Network for Equity and Exchange in Climate Governan ce and Strategy (NEXUS)Link opens in a new window with Emellyne Forman. This event is organised with the Warwick Network for Equity and Exchange in Climate Governance and Strategy (NEXUS). The event will be followed by a networking meeting for climate and environmental governance researc hers from 2pm - 3pm. Image by Ahmet Sali LOCATION:S.2.09. Social Sciences Building CATEGORIES:Economy,Energy,International Law,Climate Change,Environmental Law,law,Climate Crisis,Environment LAST-MODIFIED:20251006T111035Z ORGANIZER;CN=Celine Tan: END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR