After landmark climate win, lawyer hopes for a ‘new legal order’ to protect Indigenous rights
Six years ago, human rights lawyer Julian Aguon received a call from Vanuatu’s foreign affairs minister. The minister had an unusual request – he wanted Aguon to help develop a legal case on behalf of dozens of law students who were seeking climate justice from the world’s highest court. Aguon, a Chamorro lawyer based in Guam, was excited by the opportunity and believed they could clear up legal ambiguities he says had “long hobbled the ability of the international community to respond effectively to the climate crisis.” Over years, Aguon and his team gathered testimonies from all across the Pacific about losses inflicted by climate change. They heard from people in Vanuatu, Papua New Guinea and other places who broke with cultural protocol to share sacred knowledge of their environment and culture – hoping that telling their stories might lead to a better future. In 2025, Aguon argued the case before the international court of justice (ICJ) in The Hague and months later, the court issued a landmark ruling which determined nations have a legal obligation to prevent climate harm. Aguon says the ICJ ruling requires countries to “finally and decisively address the climate crisis” and marks a new era of climate accountability. On 2 December, Aguon and the Pacific Islands Students Fighting Climate Change (PISFCC) will be honoured with a Right Livelihood award – an international prize sometimes dubbed the alternative Nobel – for their work. A Myanmar activist group, a grassroots aid response group in Sudan and Taiwanese civic hacker and technologist Audrey Tang will also be honoured. The Right Livelihood awards began in 1980 after the Nobel foundation rejected a proposal for two new prizes for work on the environment and within developing countries. Previous winners include Edward Snowden, Wangari Maathai and Greta Thunberg. Vishal Prasad, director of PISFCC, says the award is a testament to the determination of unified Pacific Islanders working together to save their home. He says the recognition belongs to “everyone in the region”. Aguon believes it will help support a wave of rights-based climate litigation, and lead to reparations claims and compensation for ecosystem restoration. The 43-year-old founded the firm Blue Ocean Law in 2014, with a central belief that Indigenous people can provide solutions to the world’s problems. The firm pursues cases that prioritise Indigenous rights and culture to advance what Aguon called a “new legal order rooted in respect, reciprocity, and responsibility to future generations.” Ralph Regenvanu was the minister in Vanuatu who approached Aguon about the ICJ case years earlier. He said they chose Blue Ocean Law because they felt the firm could “represent what this means legally but also culturally.” Lookin ahead, the Guam-based firm is developing legal challenges to deep sea mining in the Pacific based on Indigenous guardianship, which Aguon says seeks to defend the ocean as “kin rather than commodity” to protect marine ecosystems and ensure cultural survival. It is also looking at ways to fight contamination of land and water to protect rights to access and gather medicinal plants needed for cultural reasons. Aguon said his work seeks to protect “Indigenous rights in exceedingly practical, concrete ways.” “It behooves us to try to find every possible way to protect them and their ability to thrive in their ancestral spaces,” he adds.







