Safeguarding Your Future from AI: The Existential Crisis Playbook – Go Health Pro

Safeguarding Your Future from AI: The Existential Crisis Playbook – Go Health Pro

Artificial intelligence (AI) is causing an existential crisis for many workers, myself included. With the rise of AI, I’ve often found myself wondering: what’s the point? If AI is going to take over, why bother trying? Maybe you’ve felt the same way—worried about how to safeguard your future from AI. Or perhaps you’re a parent … Read more

“It’s scary to plan for the future” – understanding the concerns, needs and hopes of young people in Ukraine – Go Health Pro

“It’s scary to plan for the future” – understanding the concerns, needs and hopes of young people in Ukraine – Go Health Pro

The war in Ukraine has had a profound impact on young people living in the country. Drawing on new research, Mariia Zolkina, Max Fras and Elisabet Vives explore what young people think about the conflict and their hopes for the future. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine is well into its third year. It has disrupted … Read more

Jobs of the future, Part Ten: the Intermediator – Go Health Pro

Jobs of the future, Part Ten: the Intermediator – Go Health Pro

It is easy to believe in these futuristic scenarios that we won’t need human advisors. In the words of Vivian Ward, the escort in Pretty Woman: Vivian: You work on commission, right? Saleswoman: Ah, yes. Vivian: Big mistake. Big. If you believe that the future will no longer involve financial advisors, you are making a … Read more

KlimaSeniorinnen, the prohibition of actio popularis cases, and future generations – a false dilemma? – EJIL: Talk! – Go Health Pro

KlimaSeniorinnen, the prohibition of actio popularis cases, and future generations – a false dilemma? – EJIL: Talk! – Go Health Pro

“Did the Court in KlimaSeniorinnen create an actio popularis?” Eight months after the ECtHR’s climate judgment against Switzerland, this question remains a bone of contention both in Swiss politics and among scholars. It relates to whether the ECtHR, in allowing for representative climate applications by associations, jettisoned admissibility requirements and allowed for abstract public interest complaints. On several recent occasions, George Letsas has examined this question, and proposed an innovative answer: Namely that the Court’s much-discussed approaches to victim status and standing can be justified, but only if understood as a recognition of the rights of future generations. Although this proposal is intriguing, it is neither evident based on the text of the KlimaSeniorinnen judgment, nor is it the only way to avoid actio popularis allegations. This post suggests an alternative approach, arguing that a simpler and more convincing answer lies in the affectedness of the older women at the heart of the case.

I. Who was the victim in KlimaSeniorinnen? Letsas’s proposal

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