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ENRICH

Defending children’s rights in the face of the looming climate crisis requires a holistic, comprehensive, and rights-based approach, which includes protecting their rights to life, survival, and healthy development as well as ensuring their participation in policy- and decision-making. Despite an extensive legal-policy framework regulating child rights and participation, there is still a huge rhetoric-reality gap between theoretical participation principles and concrete, practical realization of children’s meaningful participation in the design and implementation of environmental decisions that greatly affect them. The main goal of our project, Environment, Rights, Children (ENRICH) is to raise awareness of how the climate crisis and children’s rights intersect and to advance children’s right to have a voice in environmental/climate change matters.

The method to attain this goal is to undertake 

a) research and stakeholder surveys to assess the current level of awareness of key stakeholders regarding child rights in environmental and climate policymaking 

b) a number of national trainings, aimed at educating key environmental stakeholders about child participation rights and methods to enforce them, and 

c) two international events to share experiences, research results, and present concrete recommendations to EU policymakers regarding EU guidelines and the practical implementation of child participation policies in climate action. 

Our main target groups are environmental and child rights NGOs and activists, environmental educators and NGOs, and official bodies and policy-makers dealing with children and environmental matters. 

Project outputs will be international research with data from 7 EU countries, 21 national events, 2 international events, 1 set of advocacy submissions. 

The project supports the EU Strategy on the Rights of the Child and provides practical support for state parties regarding the implementation of concrete measures.

The project is funded
by the European Union.

The project team consists of the coordinating beneficiary Justice and Environment and 7 other environmental legal NGOs that are all members of J&E. Hintalovon Foundation being a specialized child rights NGO from Hungary helps the project with its expertise.

Association Justice & Environment, z.s.

J&E was established in 2003 during the enlargement process of the European Union. J&E is a European network of environmental law organizations. Currently J&E has 15 member organizations in total from Austria, Bulgaria, Czechia, Croatia, Estonia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, North Macedonia, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain and Ukraine. All member organizations are either entirely focused on environmental law or it is one of their topic areas. J&E lawyers are seasoned environmental law experts, experienced within their national legal systems, familiar with challenges faced by their respective communities and well aware of the EU legal framework. Its membership base allows J&E to bridge EU and national issues of environmental law and participation. Patterned on this, J&E analyses the EU system of participation in environmental matters, mainly in a form of comparative legal studies and proposes policy improvements / recommendations to decision-makers.

Webpage: www.justiceandenvironment.org

Responsibilities in the project:

J&E acts as a coordinating beneficiary, taking care of the day-to-day management of the project’s activities, including reporting and financial management.

Team of the project:

Csaba Kiss, Coordinator, info@justiceandenvironment.org, phone +36 1 322 8462

Lubica Mock, Financial Manager, finance@justiceandenvironment.org, phone +420 774 130 730

Kata Dózsa, Expert

Ms. Dózsa serves as a special expert of child rights and participatory rights in the project. She is an adjunct professor and senior associate researcher at the Brussels School of Governance – Vrije Universiteit Brussel. Her research focuses on children’s rights and climate justice. She holds a PhD in law (University of Antwerp, 2021); an Advanced Master of Children’s Rights (University of Fribourg and Institute of Kurt Bosch); an LL.M (Pazmany Peter Catholic University); and a Master in Journalism (University of Szeged). She held a postdoctoral status at the University of Antwerp Law and Development Research Group from 2021 to 2023. She is the author of the book “Children as Climate Citizens” (Routledge, 2023), and has numerous publications about children’s rights, the rights of future generations and climate change, including in the 2020 and 2023 editions of the European Yearbook on Human Rights. In 2022, she was awarded the Sustainability Research Award for her contribution to climate change policy-development in Belgium. 

BlueLink, Bulgaria

BlueLink is a foundation, registered in public interest in Bulgaria with the mission to uphold civil society, democracy, shared European values and environmental sustainability. BlueLink strives to its purpose by supporting internet networking, public interest journalism, policy advocacy and research. BlueLink’s main fields of activity are in:

  • maintaining the BlueLink Civic Action Network – a networking, coordination and information exchange hub at www.bluelink.net;
  • supporting civil society participation, access to information and justice, and stakeholder engagement through strategic use of internet and other activities;
  • operating a virtual newsroom to publish Evromegdan (in Bulgarian) and BlueLink Stories (in English, for Central and Eastern Europe) as e-magazines for ethical journalism in public interest; and
  • fostering research and analysis of internet freedom, technological and social change, civil society, democracy and sustainable development, and shaping policies that foster them.

Webpage: https://www.bluelink.net/en

Team of the project:

Pavel Antonov, pavelan@bluelink.net

Plamen Peev, plamen@bluelink.net

Ivan Koutzaroff, ivan@bluelink.net

Zoya Borisova, zoya@bluelink.net

Environmental Management and Law Association, Hungary

Environmental Management and Law Association (EMLA) is a non-profit non-governmental organization working in environmental law and environmental management on national, European and international levels. The main activities of EMLA are public interest environmental legal advice and litigation, environmental legal research, consulting and education, and carrying out of environmental management projects. EMLA is a founding member of The Access Initiative in addition to being a member of the European Environmental Bureau and the Nuclear Transparency Watch. The EMLA Foundation established by the EMLA Association is active in environmental education.

Webpage: www.emla.hu

Team of the project:

Csaba Kiss, drkiss@emla.hu

Ágnes Gajdics, agnes.g@emla.hu

Zsuzsanna Berki, berkizs@emla.hu

Estonian Environmental Law Center, Estonia

Estonian Environmental Law Center (EELC) was founded in 2007 by an environmental NGO Estonian Fund for Nature (ELF) and 3 public interest environmental lawyers. It is an independent expert organization. EELC’s aim is to shape environmental law rules and their application in Estonia in a manner that takes due account of public interests (health and well-being of citizens, biodiversity).

Webpage: www.k6k.ee

Team of the project:

Marilin Palts, marilin@k6k.ee

Merilin Kaalma, merilin@k6k.ee

Tarmo Treimann, tarmo@k6k.ee

Triin Jäädmaa, triin@k6k.ee

Hintalovon Foundation, Hungary

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Ökobüro, Austria

ÖKOBÜRO is the Alliance of the Austrian Environmental Movement.

It consists of 20 Austrian organizations engaged in environmental, nature, and animal protection like GLOBAL 2000 (Friends of the Earth Austria), FOUR PAWS, BirdLife Austria and WWF Austria.

ÖKOBÜRO works politically and legally for environmental protection and the alliance of the environmental movement. We provide our members and other environmental practitioners with our expertise in environmental law, public participation and in solving political problems.

Webpage: https://www.oekobuero.at/en/about/

Team of the project:

Marlene Schaffer, marlene.schaffer@oekobuero.at

Birgit Schmidhuber, birgit.schmidhuber@oekobuero.at

PIC, Slovenia

Legal Center for the Protection of Human Rights and the Environment is a non-governmental organisation established in 1997. Primary working areas of PIC can be described as legal protection of the environment and human rights (rights of vulnerable groups as disabled, foreigners and asylum seekers, women victims of violence, socially underprivileged individuals etc.). PIC is active on strategic level (through advocacy and lobbying in legislative procedures, civil initiatives etc.) and on operative/implementation level by offering legal counseling and legal support to individuals and NGOs. One of the main activities is providing comments and recommendations during the adoption of important laws and strategic documents in the field of environmental protection and spatial management and proposing systemic changes in particular towards a better inclusion of the public in decision-making processes and improvements of access to effective legal remedies. PIC is striving for a consistent and correct application of the Aarhus Convention, especially regarding effective exercise of the right to participate of NGOs and the wider public in environmental procedures. In this regard PIC is focusing also on influencing court procedures by filing legal remedies and advocating for their effectiveness. PIC is one of thirteen Slovenian NGOs who have obtained a status of a NGO acting in the public interest in environmental matters on national level.

Webpage: https://pic.si/

Team of the project:

Aljosa Petek, aljosa.petek@pic.si

Luka Strubelj, luka.strubelj@pic.si

UfU, Germany
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Zelena Akcija, Croatia

Zelena akcija/FoE Croatia is a member of the largest network of environmental associations in the world, Friends of the Earth International.

Through our work, we want to contribute to the improvement of environmental protection systems at the local, national and global levels by encouraging change through campaigns, non-violent direct actions, projects, public participation in decision-making, etc. The goal of our activities is to protect the environment and nature and encourage development towards a low-carbon society, guided by the principles of social justice and systemic change. We pay the greatest attention to activities aimed at encouraging public participation in environmental decision-making and improving the quality of life in Croatia.

We also share information, experience and expertise in the field of environmental protection with other associations, individuals, communities, schools, etc. in Croatia and beyond.

Webpage: https://www.zelena-akcija.hr/en

Team of the project:

Enes Cerimagic, enes@zelena-akcija.hr

Zeljka Leljak Gracin, zeljka@zelena-akcija.hr

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The concept of “climate rights” has been introduced by the DACE project to capture a variety of rights and legal mechanisms, i.e., existing and nascent types/classes of rights at international, EU and national level with relevance to climate change, defined as follows:

all substantive and procedural rights in connection with climate change related matters”.

As an operational definition, its main purpose is to inform our study of climate rights as vehicles for just and engaging society in which climate justice and protection against the consequences of climate change are high on the agenda for the governments, businesses and the society as a whole. This is a broad and overarching definition which could come across political, social and civil society domains and can be used for engagement of key target groups of the project like climate activists, environmental associations, other interested citizens and local communities, but also bar associations, students, journalists. “Climate rights” in the sense of the DACE project thus does not only include rights in a narrow legal sense, such as human or social rights, but encompasses legal mechanisms that enable individuals and organisations to protect their rights, to demand climate action or hold governments and businesses accountable. Even if we don’t claim coining a new concept of the legal doctrine, we could still test its practical application, and stir a debate about it with national and EU stakeholders. While testing the application of the concept, we aim to raise the awareness of target groups and general public of climate rights (in general terms or about specific rights related to or affected by climate change: e.g., right to life, health, home, dignity); to test the readiness of target groups to exercise such climate rights already now, or to explore the existing practice of exercising such rights; and to mobilise target groups’ support for introducing a stronger and more comprehensive system of climate rights that could be also defined as rights to climate protection[1].

[1] Kahl. 2022. A human right to climate protection – Necessary protection or human rights proliferation?

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Human rights-based strategic climate litigation in Europe often invokes Article 2 and 8 of the ECHR, claiming that the (respective) government’s failure to take sufficient action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and address climate change constituted a breach of their rights to life and private/family life, as the impacts of climate change posed threats to their health, well-being, and living conditions. While the ECHR and the EU Charter are distinct legal instruments, they share common values and principles. For example, there is an overlap between the rights guaranteed by both the ECHR and the EU Charter.

 

  1. Right to Life (ECHR Article 2; EU Charter Article 2): Both the ECHR and the EU Charter guarantee the right to life. ECHR Article 2 protects individuals from arbitrary deprivation of life and imposes positive obligations on states to protect individuals’ lives. Similarly, EU Charter Article 2 recognizes the right to life.
  2. Right to Respect for Private and Family Life (ECHR Article 8; EU Charter Article 7): ECHR Article 8 protects the right to respect for private and family life, including the right to privacy, family life, home, and correspondence. Similarly, EU Charter Article 7 protects the right to respect for private and family life, home, and communications. Both provisions aim to safeguard individuals’ autonomy, personal relationships, and privacy from arbitrary interference by public authorities.
  3. Non-Discrimination (ECHR Article 14; EU Charter Article 21): ECHR Article 14 ensures that the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this Convention shall be secured without discrimination, and the EU Charter Article 21 prohibits any discrimination based on any ground.

 

When implementing project activities, we will have regard to Article 52.3 of the EU Charter[1]. Practically, it means that when construing a given right enshrined in the EU Charter, we will always consider its primary meaning as well as the meaning of that particular right in the jurisprudence of the ECtHR. Nevertheless, we will not be dealing with rights that are only included in the ECHR and not in the EU Charter.

 

Besides the clearly substantive human rights-based provisions of the EU Charter, there are other sections that have fundamental relevance to our project. Some of them are formulated as rights. These are the following:

Article 11 – Freedom of expression and information

  1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers.

Article 41 – Right to good administration

  1. Every person has the right to have his or her affairs handled impartially, fairly and within a reasonable time by the institutions, bodies, offices and agencies of the Union.
  2. This right includes:

(a) the right of every person to be heard, before any individual measure which would affect him or her adversely is taken;

(b) the right of every person to have access to his or her file, while respecting the legitimate interests of confidentiality and of professional and business secrecy;

(c) the obligation of the administration to give reasons for its decisions.

Article 42 – Right of access to documents

Any citizen of the Union, and any natural or legal person residing or having its registered office in a Member State, has a right of access to documents of the institutions, bodies, offices and agencies of the Union, whatever their medium.

Article 43 – European Ombudsman

Any citizen of the Union and any natural or legal person residing or having its registered office in a Member State has the right to refer to the European Ombudsman cases of maladministration in the activities of the institutions, bodies, offices or agencies of the Union, with the exception of the Court of Justice of the European Union acting in its judicial role.

Article 44 – Right to petition

Any citizen of the Union and any natural or legal person residing or having its registered office in a Member State has the right to petition the European Parliament.

These have relevance regarding access to environmental information and public participation in climate and energy policy making and decision-making.

Article 47 – Right to an effective remedy and to a fair trial

Everyone whose rights and freedoms guaranteed by the law of the Union are violated has the right to an effective remedy before a tribunal in compliance with the conditions laid down in this Article.

Everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal previously established by law. Everyone shall have the possibility of being advised, defended and represented.

Legal aid shall be made available to those who lack sufficient resources in so far as such aid is necessary to ensure effective access to justice.

This one is about access to justice, also in climate and energy matters.

Other provisions are not formulated as rights stricto sensu, however, will be able to serve as legal basis for enforcing public influence on climate and energy policy making and decision-making:

Article 37 – Environmental protection

A high level of environmental protection and the improvement of the quality of the environment must be integrated into the policies of the Union and ensured in accordance with the principle of sustainable development.

Ultimately, these are the provisions within the EU Charter that will be referenced by the project partners in implementing project activities.

[1] 3. In so far as this Charter contains rights which correspond to rights guaranteed by the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, the meaning and scope of those rights shall be the same as those laid down by the said Convention. This provision shall not prevent Union law providing more extensive protection.

Project Actions

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Where can you meet us?

During the course of the project, partners in Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, Estonia, Germany, Hungary and Slovenia will hold a number of events and meetings where you can join us and get insight into our work relating to the enforcement of children’s rights.

To find out where and when exactly we are having our events, please follow the project partners’ websites where information is published on recent and upcoming meetings.

Also, follow the Facebook, X, Instagram and LinkedIn pages of Justice and Environment to get info on our project’s progress.

Links to the project partners’ related webpages: see the Contacts and Links section below

J&E’s Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/justiceandenvironment

J&E’s X page: https://twitter.com/justenvinet 

J&E’s Instagram page:

J&E’s LinkedIn page:

Coordinating beneficiary:

Csaba Kiss, Project Manager, info@justiceandenvironment.org

Communications and media relations:

Antonia Saric, Communications, communications@justiceandenvironment.org

Links to the project partners’ related webpages:

Austria

Bulgaria

Croatia

Estonia

Germany

Hungary

Slovenia

coming soon