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27 Sept 2025

Climate Justice and human rights focus of Thomas D’Arcy McGee Summer School 2025

Thomas D’Arcy McGee Summer School 2025 takes place 2–3 September in Carlingford

Climate Justice and human rights focus of Thomas D’Arcy McGee Summer School 2025

The Thomas D’Arcy McGee Summer School 2025 takes place 2–3 September in Carlingford

This September, against a backdrop of war, disinformation, and environmental collapse, the Thomas D’Arcy McGee Summer School returns to Carlingford in north Louth, from 2-3 September 2025, with an urgent focus: how climate justice, democracy, and human rights are being undermined by authoritarianism, corporate influence, and political inertia.

Now in its fourteenth year, the Summer School coincides with the bicentenary of McGee’s birth. A Young Irelander, Irish-Canadian statesman, and Father of Canadian Confederation, McGee’s enduring belief in dialogue, pluralism, and democracy remains central to this unique gathering.

Following the United Nations' 2022 recognition of the right to a healthy environment, global efforts to achieve climate justice face mounting resistance. The return of President Trump’s administration has accelerated attacks on international cooperation, environmental safeguards, and human rights commitments.

Organisers of the Summer School warn of a rapid erosion of multilateralism and a dangerous retreat from hard-won global agreements. “We face an existential crisis not just of climate, but of trust, truth, and governance,” the organisers said. This Summer School will challenge unsubstantiated opinion and disinformation with hard evidence and lived experience.”

These issues resonate locally following revelations that US politicians and the UK Ambassador to Washington, Lord Peter Mandelson, have been lobbying to accelerate approval for a controversial gold mining project in the Sperrin Mountains.

They expressed American investor frustration and called for a “timely decision”, raising alarm about external corporate pressure on Northern Ireland’s planning process at the expense of the local environment and community. Fidelma O’Kane of Save Our Sperrins will join activists from a range of environmental campaigners in what promises to be an energetic community panel.

Confirmed speakers include:

  • Professor Astrid Puentes Riaño, UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment
  • Ambassador Dennis King, Canadian Ambassador to Ireland
  • Professor Jennie Stephens, Professor of Climate Justice, ICARUS Climate Justice Research Centre
  • Ambassador David Donoghue, Former Irish Ambassador to the UN
  • Professor Teresa Vicente-Giménez, University of Murcia
  • Professor David Wilson, University of Toronto and McGee Biographer
  • Bernadette McAliskey, Campaigner for Social Justice and Human Rights
  • Ambassador Bob Rae, Canadian Ambassador to the UN
  • Frances Fitzgerald, former Tánaiste, Minister, TD and MEP
  • Hon. Gilles Arsenault, Minister for Environment, Energy and Climate Action from Prince Edward Island
  • Eamon Ryan, former Minister for the Environment
  • Erin McGreehan TD; Denis Drennan, President ICSMA; Adrian Kane, SIPTU; Michael Savage, Newry Chamber of Commerce; Clare McKeown, Belfast City Council; Cllr Doire Finn, Newry, Mourne and Down Council; Dr Gabriel Scally, Fellow of the Faculty of Public Health; Professor Colin Harvey, Queen’s University; Heidi McIlvenny, The Fishery Exchange; Fiddle O’Kane, Save our Sperrins; Declan Owens, EcoJustice Ireland; Dr Eduardo Salazar Ortuño, University of Murcia; Colum Sands, musician and environmental campaigner; Thelma Thompson, Altnaveigh Trust.

This year’s Summer School will explore urgent local and global issues, and look towards visible leadership, effective governance, and collective action for sustainable development, including:

  • How can we promote sustainable models of growth that do not impact negatively on the environment, climate, and health?
  • How should we strengthen our local and global institutions and laws that protect human rights and climate justice, and face down those who would try to undermine them?
  • How do we challenge industrial and agricultural pollution and extractive development and ensure that the rights of nature, community knowledge, and respect are at the centre of decisions?
  • How can we raise public awareness about the growing support worldwide to give nature intrinsic rights?

Ecosystems are not objects, as they have been treated until now; they have their own life, and human beings are a part of them. Without them, we cannot live”, says Professor Vicente-Giménez.

UN Rapporteur Astrid Puentes Riaño believes that this moment demands more than action - it demands rethinking our place on earth. “The earth does not need to be saved by us. Our role is to learn how to live on this planet without destroying it. … The right to a healthy environment is not idealistic, it’s foundational and true protection begins … with fairness,” she said.

In this Summer School, we will ask how can we act to safeguard a world order premised on respect for the environment and the human race,” said the organisers.

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