Lawfare Daily: A New Exhibition on Visual Investigation with Lisa Luksch, Anjli Parrin, and Brad Samuels

Published by The Lawfare Institute
in Cooperation With
Tyler McBrien, Managing Editor of Lawfare, sat down with Lisa Luksch, a curator at the Architekturmuseum der TUM; Anjli Parrin, Assistant Clinical Professor of Law and Director of the Global Human Rights Clinic at the University of Chicago; and Brad Samuels, a founding partner at SITU and the Director of SITU Research. They talked about a new exhibition, “Visual Investigations: Between Advocacy, Journalism, and Law,” which opens on Oct. 10 at the Architekturmuseum der TUM in Munich. The exhibition explores the emergent field of visual investigation, which brings together interdisciplinary teams of architects, filmmakers, computer scientists, and others who synthesize images, video, and other data to present factual accounts of human rights abuses.
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Transcript
[Intro]
Lisa
Luksch: I think
what's also been incredibly powerful and what is sometimes missing from the
law, less perhaps from journalism and certainly not from advocacy, is the
emotion of it all. The incredible loss that those who are at the front lines of
the climate crisis feel.
Tyler
McBrien: It's the
Lawfare Podcast. I'm Tyler McBrien, Managing Editor of Lawfare, with
Lisa Luksch, a curator at the Architekturmuseum der TUM, Anjli Parrin,
Assistant Clinical Professor of Law and director of the Global Human Rights
Clinic at the University of Chicago, and Brad Samuels, a founding partner at SITU
and the director of SITU Research.
Brad
Samuels: The space of
the museum isn't just one to sort of make ideological claims, you know, it's to
present fact finding and reporting in its, you know, in all of its complexity. And
I think the visual nature of this factfinding reporting is what makes it
relevant to, you know, the art context, the architecture context.
Tyler
McBrien: Today, we're
talking about a new exhibition, “Visual Investigations: Between Advocacy,
Journalism, and Law,” which opens on October 10th at the Architekturmuseum der
TUM in Munich. The exhibition explores the emergent field of visual
investigation, which brings together interdisciplinary teams of architects,
filmmakers, computer scientists, and others, who synthesize images, video, and
other data, to present factual accounts of human rights abuses.
Lisa, I would
love to start with you to briefly introduce us to the exhibition, how it came
to be, and then if you might explain why it's being housed at the Architekturmuseum
der TUM. You know, why here? Why your, this host institution?
Lisa
Luksch: Yes, thank
you. So, as you were saying, the Architekturmuseum is run by the Technical
University of Munich and I'm there as a chair for curatorial studies. And we,
as a team of the chair, last summer had an excursion to the Venice Biennale,
the Architecture Biennale of 2023.
And when we went
there, one of the exhibits that we were most yeah, struck by, was Alison
Killing's installation and research into the detention camps in China, in
Xinjiang. And from there, or from that point on, we had this idea of, or we
were intrigued by the question: why architects? So, why are architects even
considered in that process? Why are they considered skilled in a way? Why are
they interested in uncovering human rights violations?
And so, our
director, Andres Lepik, he reached out to Brad, whom he knew from his time at
MoMA in New York, because he knew of SITU Research and the things they were
doing. And together with Brad and Alison, we kicked off a meeting to think
about bringing this topic that we, back then, didn't frame as anything but
architecture involved in human rights and try to develop it further. And then
Alison brought in a research network called Bellingcat, who are doing amazing
work and are well known over, all over the world for their investigations. And
then we also approached a fourth partner, the Center for Special Technologies,
a research network based in Ukraine, and so in Kyiv and Berlin.
And yeah, when
we had that four, like a critical number, I'd say of four, we started
developing an exhibition around it, around the question: what role does
architecture take in that field of many perspectives, specifically being law,
advocacy, and journalism? And yeah, from there we took it and we developed over
the course of, yeah, a bit less than a year, I'd say, and we developed this
exhibition and the product of those many meetings that we had and people we
reached out to, the network we gained, is now an exhibition of, an exhibition
evolving around seven case studies of four different partners looking into,
yeah, a variety of human rights violations around the globe. So five continents
we're looking at, and these research networks introducing their methodology and
their, kind of, investigative methods into those violations.
Tyler
McBrien: Brad, I
wonder if I could bring you into the conversation, first just to hear about how
you began to think of curating this exhibition, but also, you know, as Lisa
pointed out, there is a through line, a common thread with architecture, but
it's quite a diverse group of case studies in geographical scope, in methodology.
So how did you know, think through, both the through line here and then also
ensuring, you know, diversity to represent a fairly diverse field?
Brad
Samuels: Yeah, it's
interesting. It's really the point of departure or one of the unifying factors
originally was architecture, the study of architecture. But I think we kind of
quickly, that was very much a point of departure for, you know, what became a
much more interdisciplinary and collaborative endeavor, and I think it's going
to be interesting to see all these different knowledge bases and fields brought
into an architecture context and a museum context. I'm very keen to see what
kind of conversations might arise from that.
I think our
approach, in conversation with Lisa and Andres, was to think broadly, almost
take a cross section of what visual investigations looks like right now. And to
really center, sort of ironically or sort of paradoxically rather, center the
space in between. In other words, it's not just law, it's not just advocacy,
it's not just journalism, it's all of those things. And so I think, you know,
when coming up with a title together, that felt really important, you know,
between journalism, advocacy, and law. Each has its own distinct identities,
ethics, norms, which are critically important, and they also represent
destinations for this work. You know, is it going to court? Is it a report that
will be leveraged for advocacy purposes? Is it, you know, in the media?
However, one of
the realities I think we have to contend with is that it's also very fluid. In
other words, we're moving fluidly between these different fields, and we wanted
to kind of foreground that space in between, and sort of big, sort of a big
tent of visual investigations, but bringing in, you know, projects that
represent law, another project, which is really an advocacy project or
historical project, and others that are focused on journalism.
So, that was the
original thinking and to try and provide a kind of sweep. It's also deeply
reflected in the collaborators and other participants in the show as well.
Tyler
McBrien: Yeah, and I
want to dig into some of the case studies. So maybe one way to do that is,
Anjli, I'm specifically interested in your view on this as a lawyer, a law
professor, a practitioner, someone who runs a, you know, human rights clinic, of
this idea of the space between law, advocacy, journalism, and then also each of
those fields limitations on their own.
So if another
through line of this work is justice and accountability for these human rights
abuses, why then present these investigations in a museum exhibition setting?
You know, what is the purpose here when many of these cases are going to go to
a court, or leaders will see them in the media? What is the purpose of putting
this into a museum exhibition? And then feel free to draw on, you know, one of
the case studies or projects you were involved in as well.
Anjli
Parrin:
Thanks, Tyler. I think
for me as a lawyer who's trying to advance positive change around the world,
one of the things that I'm constantly thinking about is how does change happen
and what drives it? And really, where is the law a useful tool to advance
justice and what are the areas in which it falls short? And so how do different
approaches and methods advance change?
In terms of a
museum, art, architecture, I think what's been incredible for me is it allows
us to imagine a different world. And it allows us to take a space and say,
what's the world that I actually want? And so we, through, you know, I was
involved in the exhibit piece that was around climate justice, and an upcoming
case before the International Court of Justice which will be an advisory
opinion looking at: what is owed as a result of anthropogenic emissions? What
do we have to, what are the consequences of climate inaction under
international law?
And that's a
very important legal question, which is being answered in this moment. The
written submissions have been filed. Oral hearings will be opening during the
course of this museum exhibit. But what the space of a museum allows us to do,
is to ask questions, to provoke, to think about: even if legally we can't prove
that some, one aspect caused another what is the relationship between them? Who's
at the forefront of fighting for climate justice and who is impacted most by
climate harms? And what's the world that they imagine? What's the world that
they want? I think that space in between allows us to look beyond the kind of
strictures of a court.
The
International Court of Justice itself is an incredibly rigid court. Actually,
the Pacific Island students who pushed for this climate justice advisory
opinion in the first place, and who spent years and years trying to advocate to
get a General Assembly resolution in order to then be able to get the
International Court of Justice to take up this question, are effectively not
able to present before the court itself, because they're not state parties.
It's a court that's between state parties.
The actual
structure of the court itself is rather antiquated and anti-climate justice, I
might say. You have to give 20 copies of your written submissions printed out
before the court. Now imagine somebody from Fiji has to fly all the way to The
Hague to present these physical copies to the ICJ.
And so we wanted
to look at these questions through a different lens to say, what are the
stories from Pacific Islands? What does the knowledge from the ocean and from
the islands tell us? And how do we think about answering the questions that the
ICJ posits, through the lens of those most impacted?
Tyler
McBrien: If I'm not
mistaken, the thing that's being presented at the exhibition related to that
case is a film, less a documentary and more so, a provocative art piece. So,
Lisa, I wonder if there's, you know, even a fourth word in the between
journalism, advocacy and law that is art or performance or, you know, art, widely
understood. So how do you see the arts coming in as well, to this same mission?
Lisa
Luksch: I think that
the museum is actually a place where a lot of these things that are usually,
unfortunately discussed in a bubble are presented to people who are not
expecting to be presented exactly that. They might go into the museum on a
Sunday stroll and our museum is, I think, the best place to look at that
example, because it's actually, it's hosted at the Pinakothek der Moderne,
which is an art museum, and it's four museums under one roof. You buy one
ticket, you spend your Sunday at the museum, and then, whoops, in the architecture
museum, you're presented with, yeah, a variety of human rights violations and
how they are brought to the fore.
Yeah, I think
this is a role that we take with our exhibitions, that we actively take with
our exhibitions. I think, it's both a chance and a responsibility that
architecture can actually actively take a stand in this. And this is, this goes
for the museum as well, right? So this could just be a place to exhibit art,
but we take art and architecture and use it to exhibit what we think relevant. And
in this case, it is exactly that. And art in the specific case that Anjli
described, art as the film, in this case, in my opinion, is a way to, yeah, not
work in those very specific boundaries, but to combine them, and to approach
people in a more inclusive way, I'd say.
Anjli
Parrin:
I think what's also been
incredibly powerful and what is sometimes missing from the law, less perhaps
from journalism and certainly not from advocacy, is the emotion of it all. The incredible
loss that those who are at the front lines of the climate crisis feel: loss of
culture, loss of connection to their ancestors, loss of their homes, is
something that you can try to capture in a legal case, but often you're
constrained by the dryness of needing to prove an argument.
And I think
where we found it's so incredible to have the space that the museum offers us,
is it allows us to talk about it in the terms of emotion and of feelings and of,
to express the anger, the loss, the grief that people feel with these issues,
which otherwise in a courtroom, we might not be able to do to the same extent. And
certainly when it comes to the International Court of Justice, which is an
interstate court, you're not actually looking at the, necessarily at the
individuals who are impacted. You're not hearing those testimonies. I think it
allows us to bring that dimension into the conversation.
Tyler
McBrien: Yeah, it's a
great point. And, you know, sometimes these emotional pieces of evidence are
completely excluded by design, and if they're not admissible or excluded in
some for some other reason.
Brad, I want to
give the listeners, especially ones who are unable to make it to Munich,
hopefully some listeners will go to the exhibition, but what they'll see when
they go. And I also would love to hear
your, how you think through translating these investigations to the museum
setting. I don't think this is your first time translating to an exhibition,
and also SITU is involved with a few of the case studies. So, what will people
see when they enter, and how did you think through constructing it for viewers?
Brad
Samuels: Yeah, I
mean, this was, the layout of the exhibition was really driven by Lisa and
Andres. You know, we've had a lot of conversations about how to try and do
this, and one of the challenges was, you know, seven case studies, each of
which focuses on very intense subject matter, you know, disturbing and
challenging subject matter, in a space, in a sort of exhibition space, which is
a kind of civic space, right? How do you ensure that you're not sacrificing the
specificity and rigor and intention of the work while also take full advantage
of the museum context?
And so what we
ended up doing, what Lisa and Andres’ team ended up doing, was thinking about
the cases as almost seven exhibitions within an exhibition. And so you imagine
these seven rooms within this large, beautiful space that has, you know, a lot
of natural light and high ceilings that, you know, the kind of spaces that are
unique to museums. So inside that large space, there's these seven individual
spaces and you have to be very intentional, right?
You're moving
through the threshold. You're choosing to walk into an exhibit about enforced
disappearances, or detention camps, or suppression of dissent. And when you're
in that space, once you're in this sort of these secondary spaces, there's all
kinds of different media. There's video. There's text. There's large super-graphics
on the wall, films.
The work is, you
know, all of this work is highly, you know, it's about taking disparate data
and sort of bringing it together to create something that's greater than the
sum of its parts, or the investigation, which draws on a lot of different
evidentiary assets. And so, this is a place to kind of look under the hood, in
a way. You know, to take not just the distilled version, which you might find
in court or find showing up in a newspaper, you know, or a media outlet, but to
actually look at all the constituent parts and spend time with it.
I think there
remains a pretty fundamental question, and I don't think any of us know the
answer to this, which is: how is the public going to get through this exhibit? It's
emotionally completely exhausting, and challenging. It will be interesting to
see if that's even possible, but I have to imagine after, you know, if you
really spend time with the work, you're going to be pretty tired by the second
case study. You might want to go back another time or, you know, so that's kind
of how it's been assembled.
It’s really
thoughtful. And I think there's also been questions about how not to sort of
inadvertently expose people to graphic content, and you know, there's a lot of
questions around how to, in a space which is all about visual, how to really
mitigate the effects of the visual, in a way, and the auditory. So there was a
lot of thought about that as well, which from a museum perspective is sort of
cutting against the grain of what you'd usually seek to be doing.
To the question
of our work in exhibitions: I actually must say I have a very fraught
relationship to exhibitions. I've always felt uncomfortable, about our work in
that context. And we haven't done many exhibitions at all, actually. And almost
all of our work is, you know, either going to court or it's a report that's
going to be put out with a human rights organization. But there was something
about this moment in time when we were approached by the museum that felt like,
and maybe it's a sort of, sense that other forms feel like they're failing us
in some ways, that the museum context felt uniquely capable of foregrounding
certain types of work. And it just felt like the right time.
And that's the
reason, you know, we have four different projects in this exhibition, and two
of them are projects that we've completed already. But we thought about what
projects could we include that could only be presented in this way because it's
a museum context. And so the project that Anjli was describing, about the
climate change in the Pacific Islands is one of them. So that's something that
is being, you know, presented for the first time in this exhibition in a format
which no one asked for. We just felt like it was the right format. It needed to
be in this format, as a film, for the reasons Anjali described.
And then another
project about the West Bank and land dispossession. And that project, also, no
one was asking for, but it felt like a, you know, space in which we could
present it first. And hopefully both of these, ironically, and without much
foresight, both of them have ICJ advisory opinions attached to them that are
happening right now. So all of a sudden, both cases have the potential to, and
this is exciting for us, to have lives after the exhibition, you know, in
contexts that are more traditionally legal.
Anjli
Parrin:
I think part of what we
were trying to do with the various case studies is also showcase how
international law is made, where journalism derives from, and some of the
unusual suspects. The case before the International Court of Justice was
brought by Vanuatu. And the Pacific Islands’ nations have been the most vocal
in trying to advance international law around climate justice. And in the film,
you have a young activist who talks about the role of Pacific Island young
people as world builders. And I think that's been really powerful.
In all of the
seven case studies, we're looking at questions which might not normally make it
into law, which might be one special piece as part of a journalism
investigation, but won't necessarily hold the broader conversation. And which
often, there's often a misperception that they, that this isn't what drives
change, but what you see is that it's young people, it's those most impacted,
it's the communities on the ground that are pushing forward a lot of the really
innovative advancements in both law, advocacy, and journalism. And I think one
of the things that we wanted to do was highlight not just how are things
happening, but also who's making these decisions, whose voice matters and how
is that being used in international law.
Brad
Samuels: And I just
want to also add to that, that Neil Sanzgiri is the filmmaker who worked with
us on this film, and without his contribution, you know, that none of this
would have happened. So yeah, shout out to Neil.
Tyler
McBrien: Anjli, I
want to go back to you for this question. I understand that a good bit of
methodology is also presented alongside these case studies.
So, it's not
just these visually striking maps and videos, and just these really engaging
media, but also, you know, a heavy amount of textual methodology, explanatory
pieces about remote sensing technology. So, I think on, you know, on the one
hand it could be, of course, emotionally taxing to get through, but your
average museum goer, you know, is also then confronted with some highly
technical methodology. Why was it important to put both out there? You know,
why is it not sufficient just to present the more visual product of the
investigation?
Anjli
Parrin:
I think for a couple of
reasons. First, there's not a lot of knowledge or understanding about how
visual investigations actually work. And I think for us, it was really
important to talk about what are the possibilities that visual investigations
give lawyers, advocates, journalists, and others, and what are the limitations
of that. To some extent, part of what we're trying to do is have a conversation
also about methodology and not just about substance.
And so, in my
day-to-day work for example, I might be using a lot of these technologies as a
tool of factfinding, right? Remote sensing might be a way to see where is a
mass atrocity happening? What has changed in the landscape over time? How has
settlements in the West Bank changed over the years? Which is something where
if I'm going on the ground, I'm going to see what happens in that specific
moment. I'm not going to be able to go back 20 years in time. Of course, with
satellite imagery, that's something that I can then do. So, for us, it's about
showing visual investigations first as a tool of factfinding.
Second, I think
it's about looking at visual investigations and a lot of these technologies,
which are seen as, I think, as you note, quite technical, maybe a little bit
advanced, the domain of computer science or other expertise, and certainly
something that lawyers often are a little bit scared of, as really important
analytical tools: how do we use these tools to understand the world better? To
look at something in a way that we might not have been able to before? To take
50,000 pieces of data and make sense of them, in a specific geography, and in a
specific moment? And I think that's where the architecture piece comes in.
And then
finally, how can you use these tools to actually simplify your life? Or
sometimes if, you know, when I submit expert reports to a court, for example, I
might have a 700-page report that has 15 different experts who've worked on it,
that has all kinds of forensic analysis, medical analysis, criminalistics
analysis, and I think where I see the power of visual investigations is making
it make sense, making it accessible. Because while the court, in my case, the
court might be the audience, my second audience is those who are most impacted.
And I want them to be able to look at the same information that I've produced
and say, actually, okay, this makes sense. This is what happened to my
community. This is what's happening on the ground. And I think that's where
it's been really useful as a tool of, actually, simplification.
But I think,
especially in the era where, with artificial intelligence, it's so hard to
trust what information is true, with, a kind of, I think, an attack on the
truth, or at least a questioning of the truth. One of the things that's really
important is to show your methods, is to say, this is how I got to where I am,
and that's why you should believe it. Because I think the reality is saying
something is true just because it is, doesn't cut it anymore. And we are in an
era where you have to explain why you think something is correct and why you
think something is true. Of course, in the courtroom context, that's something
that we're always doing, right?
And I think
Brad's coming at this, and perhaps Lisa coming at this, with this kind of
public advocacy goal. We're coming at this as trying to make the law and these
legal tools accessible and then trying to also move it back. You know, we're
trying to have a conversation on both sides. So we want there to be a conversation
in the public about the International Court of Justice, and at the
International Court of Justice, we want there to be a conversation about the
public.
And so we are
very much seeing this film as also being useful to the court proceedings
itself, be it through public advocacy, be it through showing some of these
testimonies that are in the film at the visitor center of the ICJ, through
other forms of protest, through having public hearings. I think for us, what's
really important is that there is this dialogue between the court in the world
and the world in the court.
Brad
Samuels: We
definitely feel like it's a false dichotomy or a false choice to have to say
this is either going to be accessible or it's going to be, you know, very
technical. I think we definitely felt like we were going to make an attempt to
have it both ways in this exhibition, and accept that some people will engage
with some of the content at a higher level and others will go really deep in
specific places, but it's all there if you want to engage with it.
And there was,
there's an effort made to make sure it's not esoteric and only the language is
only, you know, readable by lawyers or computer scientists, you know, there's
definitely an effort made, but I think different people will engage with
different parts of the exhibition and we're totally fine with that.
And we think
it's important for the reasons that Anjli outlined, it's really important to
show your work. And it's also really important, I think, for me personally, to
kind of take the position that the space of the museum isn't just one to sort
of make ideological claims. You know, it's to present fact finding and reporting
in its, in all of its complexity. And I think the visual nature of this fact
finding and reporting is what, you know, makes it relevant to, you know, the
art context, the architecture context, but it doesn't mean it needs to be
simplified in any way.
Lisa
Luksch: In the end,
we also really didn't want these, let's say, visual investigations to only be
compelling, because they are complex. Like, we don't want people to only
believe, aha, this result must be true because wow, this looks so complex and
so expert. But we want people to be able to understand how the team, of
experts, obviously, but how the team got from problem to solution in a way, if
that's a bit too simplified. But that there is no good in people just seeing,
aha, there is experts working on this, I don't, I can't understand any of this,
or this is too much for me, but I just believe it because it looks so good, it's
compelling.
But they really,
in each of the cases, this was our goal, should be able, if they have the time
and, yeah, the emotional capacity to get through all of them, they should, in
each of those very individual case studies, be able to understand what the team
was confronted with and how they came to their conclusions.
And one very,
very good example of this is, in my opinion, well, they're obviously all very
good, but one very good example for this, exactly, is the Bellingcat piece that
evolves all around sound analysis. And they really tried to make it very, very
obvious for everyone how a bullet travels and what that means for where the
location of a shooter can most likely be, and yeah, the installation that
evolved around it now has a Dolby Surround system. My team was very proud that
they can actually, really build that. So that's just what I wanted to add.
Tyler
McBrien: Yeah, I
think your point about accessibility is also especially salient because in at
least some of the exhibitions, at least some of them involve user-generated
content. So theoretically can relate to anyone who has a smartphone or is able
to record something.
But Brad, I want
to pick up on something you were talking about earlier about the, sort of, the
afterlives of these investigations, or some of them have are time bound.
They've been sort of completed, but others are ongoing. I'm curious what your
hopes are, at least for some of these case studies beyond the end of the
exhibition, whenever it wraps up in February: the afterlife of it.
Brad
Samuels: Yeah, I
mean, I think the one that stands out in terms of what's next, is the work on
the West Bank. And sort of the evaluation of whether the violations we're
seeing constitute apartheid, or the crime of apartheid. e worked with Yeshtin,
which is a human rights, Israeli-based human rights organization, and Michael
Sfard, who's a human rights attorney, Israeli human rights attorney, to
basically build a, you know, it's not quite a trial-ready dossier, but It's
towards an evidentiary file that could be used for litigation.
What that meant
was that we went very specific. We've looked at three different locations,
looked at three different types of violations, and spent time assembling
evidence, really specifically around this question of apartheid, right? It
wasn't a broad set of sort of questions about the occupation. It was very
specific.
And as I
mentioned, the ICJ's advisory opinion came out in July in the middle of when we
were working on this. And well, that's not a legally binding opinion. It does
sort of open the door for different forms of litigation in a variety of
jurisdictions. And that is likely what we'll be looking at next. You know, how
can this work be applied in court? What jurisdictions make sense? You know,
what other work needs to be done, partially based on the question of
jurisdiction, to sort of bring it forward in a kind of, in a very specific way
in which it would need to be in order to be useful in legal contexts.
Another thing
that I'm kind of interested in terms of what comes next is that, you know, we
were acutely aware of what it means to do work on the subject of Israel-Palestine
within the German context, the German institutional context. And there's been a
lot of pressure from all sides. You know, there's been boycotts of German
institutions, by artists because, you know, against some of the suppression of
different types of dissent, things that have happened in different museum
contexts in Germany over the past year that have really put a chill on work
that's critical of Israel.
And there was
even, you know, a deep ambivalence within our own team about whether to
participate, you know, let alone do work on the subject matter of the West
Bank. And we chose to go ahead and do it, and I think that's an important thing
that I want to flag. Also, you know, with gratitude to Lisa and Andres for
creating a space for that, because I know it's not going to be easy, but it
does reflect a kind of real belief in during this very difficult time, the
importance of spaces of civil discourse, of presenting information, of having
difficult conversations, and that was a friction and a tension, institutional
tension.
And like I said,
from both sides, both, you know, from the artists and architects out there and
from all the people who would have problems, you know, and find very
problematic the work that criticizes Israel. So I think, you know, once again,
the space in between feels important, and I'll be interested to see how the
work is engaged with in this, you know, very specific German institutional
context.
Lisa
Luksch: I'm also, I'm
very thankful to obviously all the teams to, yeah, for the effort that they all
did. We invited them to do extra work, basically, to add to their normal
workload. And they all did so amazing, and I think specifically the West Bank
project also, obviously, something that created some kind of, yeah, difficulty
to, to communicate within, both within the museum and at the university.
But I think
that's what makes it, what makes this such a great opportunity that we're
actually now presenting it as both, right? As a piece at the museum that is
owned by the university, and that the conversations we want to initiate around
that, both just with any visitor, but then also within the public program that
we're doing, so within guided tours, but also within talks that we're having.
Yeah, I'm even
more excited for the conversations that I'm having with all of our visitors
than the mere exhibition itself, because that's when it gets really
interesting, when the work that we've all put in for that year is actually out
there and is received and yeah, reacted to by visitors. And that's where, yeah,
where everything gets very interesting. So I'm very happy to finally welcome
all of the visitors to our exhibition.
Tyler
McBrien: Anjli, I'm
also curious your hopes for the afterlife of the climate film, which is, I
think, ironic because you would, you know, as one might assume as a lawyer, you
would give an answer similar to Brad just now, but I take it you probably
won't. So I'm curious, you know, what your hopes are for the film afterwards.
Anjli
Parrin:
Yeah, I think I have two
main goals and hopes. The first is really backward-looking. I hope that the
film allows us to interrogate some of the structures, the larger sense of
structures around how justice is done, who decides who makes the rules and who's
in charge of protecting the future.
I think what the
museum piece and the film has allowed us to do is to have those questions put
out there. Why is it that the International Court of Justice is the arbiter for
the future, well, the present and the future of those in the Pacific Islands, and
of course, across other communities around the world? How did we get to this
climate crisis in the first place? What went wrong?
You know, at a
very macro level, not in the sense of a specific harm leading to a specific set
of violations. I think that's important and that will be litigated. And you're
seeing an enormous increase in climate justice litigation around the world
because it's the tools that we have, right? We have the legal system as a tool.
We've seen that perhaps, at the policy level, there isn't the level of action
that we wanted. We've been going, you know, COP after COP comes by. Most of the
fossil fuel companies vigorously attend and they advocate and lobby really hard
at all of the climate conference, the Paris Agreement was certainly much weaker
than was expected.
We're not having
a lot of success in terms of negotiating a deal. And so advocates have been
turning to the courts as a space to vindicate and obtain redress for climate
harms. But it's also a very blunt instrument. It's not an instrument that was
designed for this kind of advocacy necessarily.
It's very
narrow. It requires precedent. You need to show very specific sets of harms.
And I think what I hope the film does is allow us to say, well, like maybe we
need to take a second look at some of these systems. Maybe we need to try to
figure out what is the value of the International Court of Justice and where is
it harmful? You know, it sits in the former building of the League of Nations.
These are colonial structures and yet there are colonial structures called upon
now to act for transformation. And I think those are the questions that I
really hope outlive the exhibit. And then the second thing is,
methodologically, I really hope we can start to think about kind of
interdisciplinarity as more than just a buzzword.
It's much, much
harder. You know, Brad and I often don't speak the same language. We don't come
at questions the same way. As a lawyer, what I want to know is that, you know,
X caused Y beyond reasonable doubt. And Brad is just going to say like, you
know, I'm seeing a change. I can't tell you why that change actually happened. What
I'm seeing here is a difference.
Or, you know, I
remember once when we had an early mass grave investigation, we were discussing
like, how do we create a 3D model and document the entire mass grave site? And
we thought, okay, we can use, you know, photogrammetry. And so, we can create a
really detailed map or a recreation of what the site looks like.
And Brad said,
okay, just try to take as many close pictures from all angles of the site so
that you can basically cover every piece of this mass grave site. And I said,
okay, Brad, you know, I'll do this in about five to 10 minutes. And Brad went
no, like at least three hours. And I was like, Brad, I have six hours to do the
whole investigation. And so then we had to go back and think about how do we
actually do both? You know, is, do we need this model? Can we use something
else? Can we use something that's maybe less detailed, but it's still going to
achieve the purposes?
And I think
those are the conversations, I hope, that will outlive the actual exhibit,
because working across disciplines is not easy. Scientists and lawyers don't
necessarily agree. Certainly, architects and lawyers don't necessarily agree.
And I think more of that is what leads to stronger investigations, leads to
better ground truthing of information because no one discipline has all of the
answers. And so you kind of, you have to bring it together, but you have to do
it in a way that's going to make sense across these disciplines.
Tyler
McBrien: Well, Anjli,
Lisa and Brad, thank you all so much for taking the time to speak with me. It's
been a wonderful conversation.
Brad
Samuels: Thanks so
much.
Anjli
Parrin:
Thanks, Tyler.
Tyler
McBrien: The
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