Organizations


 * Client Earth is a charity that uses the power of the law to protect the planet and the people who live on it. We are lawyers and environmental experts who are fighting against climate change and to protect nature and the environment.
 * The Civil Liberties Defense Center (CLDC) supports movements that seek to dismantle the political and economic structures at the root of social inequality and environmental destruction. We provide litigation, education, legal, and strategic resources to strengthen and embolden their success.
 * The Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL): Since 1989, CIEL has used the power of law to protect the environment, promote human rights, and ensure a just and sustainable society. With offices in Washington, DC, and Geneva, Switzerland, CIEL’s team of attorneys, policy experts, and support staff works to provide legal counsel and advocacy, policy research, and capacity building across three program areas: Climate & Energy, Environmental Health, and People, Land, & Resources. Supports a number of strategic climate lawsuits around the world.
 * The Climate Defense Project (CDP)is a nonprofit organization that provides legal and intellectual support to the climate movement through legal representation, public education, and rights training. Its main activities are supporting criminal cases involving climate protesters, developing legal arguments, and publication of educational materials. CDP has been a leading advocate of the necessity defense — also known as the choice of evils defense — in which climate protesters have argued that their actions to protect the climate are legally justified. CDP has helped secure some of the first written rulings recognizing the climate necessity defense in the United States. It was founded by Harvard Law School graduates who also filed the first fossil fuel divestment lawsuit against a university.
 * The Climate Justice Fund (CJF) is a one-of-a-kind financial facility to support the development and use of legal avenues towards achieving global climate justice. It seeks to build the wider enabling environment for the international climate justice movement through research, capacity building and collaborations among lawyers, scientists, climate change-affected communities, and other stakeholders.
 * The Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide (ELAW) helps communities speak out for clean air, clean water, and a healthy planet. They are a global alliance of attorneys, scientists and other advocates collaborating across borders to promote grassroots efforts to build a sustainable, just future. ELAW advocates, working in their home countries, know best how to protect the environment. By giving partners the legal and scientific support they need, ELAW helps challenge environmental abuses and builds a worldwide corps of skilled, committed advocates working to protect ecosystems and communities for generations to come. we recommend you look at the report Holding Corporations Accountable for Damaging the Climate (2014).
 * The Greenpeace International is an independent campaigning organization, which uses peaceful, creative confrontation to expose global environmental problems, and develop solutions for a green and peaceful future. Their goal is to ensure the ability of the earth to nurture life in all its diversity. Is important say that has supported climate lawsuits in the Philippines, Norway, Germany and other countries and published a manual on developing new ones.
 * The Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung has objetive Fostering democracy and upholding human rights, taking action to prevent the destruction of the global ecosystem, advancing equality between women and men, securing peace through con­flict prevention in crisis zones, and defending the freedom of individuals against excessive state and economic power. They maintain close ties to the German Green Party (Alliance 90/The Greens) and as a think tank for green visions and projects, we are part of an international net­work encompassing well over 100 partner projects in approxi­mately 60 countries. The same form The Heinrich Böll Foundation supports the exchange between climate litigation practitioners globally.
 * The Japan Environmental Lawyers Federation (JELF) is a non-profit organization made up of about 620 members including 450 attorneys and 50 academics in Japan. It was founded in 1996 and is the only nonprofit, non-governmental lawyers' organization working exclusively for the environment in Japan.
 * The Sabin Center for Climate Change Law develops legal techniques to fight climate change, trains law students and lawyers in their use, and provides the public with up-to-date resources on key topics in climate law and regulation. They work closely with the scientists at Columbia University’s Earth Institute and with governmental, nongovernmental and academic organizations. They activities are spearheaded by Michael Gerrard, Faculty Director of the Sabin Center and Andrew Sabin Professor of Professional Practice at Columbia Law School, and Michael Burger, Executive Director of the Sabin Center and Senior Research Scholar at Columbia Law School. comprehensive databases of climate litigation cases (US and Non-US).
 * TheDutch Urgenda Foundation aims for a fast transition towards a sustainable society, with a focus on the transition towards a circular economy using only renewable energy. Urgenda views climate change as one of the biggest challenges of our times and looks for solutions to ensure that the earth will continue to be a safe place to live for future generations. They have filed the first successful climate case against a government, in which the Netherlands government was obliged by the court to increase its greenhouse gas mitigation ambition.