From an early age, conversations about criminal law and justice at home sparked her dream of studying at Harvard Law School—yet, when she was accepted and offered a full scholarship, it still came as a shock. Her mother’s Perry Mason stories contrasted starkly with the realities of the legal system, but Joyeeta had already found an alternative path to work on justice through her work on consumer and environmental law. In her work, she observed how weaker parties—those with fewer resources, less knowledge, or vague regulations are often exploited, and how there is a double standard when it comes to developing countries. Nowhere is this double standard more magnified than in climate change: despite decades of sound scientific knowledge, we continue to “dump” the consequences onto vulnerable communities thinking it won’t happen to us.
Despite it all, Joyeeta remains optimistic. She highlights the power of education and the pivotal role of research in informing social movements, noting that every time a government falls, a window opens for transformative change— a change that can sometimes happen overnight.
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