“In Science We Trust”: Evidence-Based Judicial Innovation in Climate-Related Litigation

Authors

  • Ludovica D’Apote

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15168/2284-4503-4130

Keywords:

climate litigation, scientific evidence, epistemic authority, state responsibility, human rights and climate change

Abstract

This article investigates the epistemic role of science in shaping judicial reasoning on states’ environmental and climate obligations. It argues that scientific knowledge functions not merely as auxiliary evidence but as an epistemic infrastructure through which courts construct, interpret and enforce climate-related duties. By examining jurisprudence from the Inter-American and European human rights systems, alongside landmark national and international precedents, the study argues that courts progressively embed scientific consensus into legal argumentation. This process enables them to translate empirical findings – particularly those consolidated by the IPCC – into normative benchmarks for assessing state responsibility in environmental and climate matters.

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Published

2026-05-29

How to Cite

1.
D’Apote L. “In Science We Trust”: Evidence-Based Judicial Innovation in Climate-Related Litigation. BioLaw [Internet]. 2026 May 29 [cited 2026 Jun. 13];(3S):153-67. Available from: https://teseo.unitn.it/biolaw/article/view/4130