Funding: SNSF Ambizione 2023-2026 (SNF project website)
PI: Dr. Jevgeniy Bluwstein (UniBe profile, Google Scholar, ResearchGate)
PhD student: Lucie Benoit (UniBe profile)
Project description: Drawing on interdisciplinary research across the fields of legal anthropology, political ecology and political economy, and based on methods including courtroom ethnography, participant observation, interviews, and discourse analysis, this project examines how the Swiss climate movement mobilizes the courts to transform climate politics through juridification and judicialization. Empirically, the project focuses on the Swiss climate movement and how it mobilizes legal conflicts through different forms of campaigning, protests, and court cases, including strategic litigation against states (e.g. KlimaSeniorinnen v. Switzerland) and corporations (e.g. Asmania et al v. Holcim), as well as reactive litigation by the state against climate activists who have engaged in climate civil disobedience (e.g. Extinction Rebellion). The project examines what justice claims activists articulate through different forms of campaigning, protests and legal proceedings, what legal strategies climate activists and their lawyers adopt in lawsuits and in litigation trials in the courts, and how the state responds to climate activism (through police, prosecutors, judges, legislative initiatives).
Project keywords: Climate litigation, climate civil disobedience, social movements, climate politics, climate justice, political ecology, legal anthropology
PhD project description (Lucie Benoit):
Lucie Benoit is a PhD candidate within the SNSF Ambizione project. Her research interests lie in the anthropology of law, critical legal studies, and graphic ethnography. Lucie examines the criminal trials of climate activists prosecuted for various forms of disruptive protest—such as unauthorised demonstrations or roadblocks—in Switzerland. Drawing empirically on courtroom ethnography, she explores the affordances and limits of these trials as sites for making sense of disruptive protests through their translation into the discursive and material spaces of law. In doing so, she seeks to complicate dichotomous accounts of criminal trials as either instruments of domination or arenas of resistance.
Lucie holds a Master’s degree in Environmental Sciences and Humanities from the University of Fribourg.
Project outputs
Bluwstein, Jevgeniy (2026): The trouble with exhausted carbon budgets, offsets, and removals in climate litigation against states: the case of KlimaSeniorinnen v. Switzerland at ECtHR. European Journal of International Law 36(4)
Bluwstein, Jevgeniy; Demay, Clémence; Benoit, Lucie (2023). Civil Disobedience on Trial in Switzerland, Verfassungsblog: https://verfassungsblog.de/civil-disobedience-on-trial-in-switzerland/
Bluwstein, Jevgeniy; Demay, Clémence; Benoit, Lucie (2023). Civil disobedience and climate trials in Switzerland - What are they fighting for in the Swiss courts? Bern: humanrights.ch (available in EN/DE/FR)