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The rights of nature as a legal response to the global environmental crisis? A critical review of international law’s ‘greening’ agenda

The rights of nature as a legal response to the global environmental crisis? A critical review of international law’s ‘greening’ agenda
The rights of nature as a legal response to the global environmental crisis? A critical review of international law’s ‘greening’ agenda
Over the past decade and a half, various natural entities have been recognised as having rights or legal personhood in certain domestic jurisdictions. The idea of nature as rights-bearing is seen by advocates to be a new and improved response to environmental threats. While rights of nature approaches are increasingly evident in transnational law, orthodox international law has yet to engage seriously with such approaches, despite increasing calls to recognise the rights of nature in international law. In this contribution we consider the potential and limitations of rights-based protections of nature as part of the ‘greening’ of international law. We argue that attempts to incorporate the rights of nature into international law need to be understood within the wider context and history of international law, including trajectories of colonialism and economic resource exploitation. Although rights of nature approaches may offer a path towards a greener international law, this path should not be followed in a way that reproduces problematic, homogenising aspects of international law, but instead centres human relationality with nature in place. Instead, we argue that there are important lessons to be learnt from transnational attempts to protect and implement rights of nature and legal personhood, especially where models are informed by Indigenous peoples’ relationships with nature.
0167-6768
47-74
T.M.C. Asser Press
Gilbert, Jérémie
a8c0d4e3-dbb8-48b4-82af-646a4763697d
Macpherson, Elizabeth
66a71347-270f-43a6-8e49-e9d169ffce9c
Jones, Emily
6a3d30c3-f923-4c55-9bf6-817f03c9c090
Dehm, Julia
7e034ee9-6d48-4d2c-a6ef-8b0d8e5f176f
Dam-de Jong, D.
Amtenbrink, F.
Gilbert, Jérémie
a8c0d4e3-dbb8-48b4-82af-646a4763697d
Macpherson, Elizabeth
66a71347-270f-43a6-8e49-e9d169ffce9c
Jones, Emily
6a3d30c3-f923-4c55-9bf6-817f03c9c090
Dehm, Julia
7e034ee9-6d48-4d2c-a6ef-8b0d8e5f176f
Dam-de Jong, D.
Amtenbrink, F.

Gilbert, Jérémie, Macpherson, Elizabeth, Jones, Emily and Dehm, Julia (2023) The rights of nature as a legal response to the global environmental crisis? A critical review of international law’s ‘greening’ agenda. In, Dam-de Jong, D. and Amtenbrink, F. (eds.) Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2021. (Netherlands Yearbook of International Law, 52) 1 ed. T.M.C. Asser Press, pp. 47-74. (doi:10.1007/978-94-6265-587-4_3).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

Over the past decade and a half, various natural entities have been recognised as having rights or legal personhood in certain domestic jurisdictions. The idea of nature as rights-bearing is seen by advocates to be a new and improved response to environmental threats. While rights of nature approaches are increasingly evident in transnational law, orthodox international law has yet to engage seriously with such approaches, despite increasing calls to recognise the rights of nature in international law. In this contribution we consider the potential and limitations of rights-based protections of nature as part of the ‘greening’ of international law. We argue that attempts to incorporate the rights of nature into international law need to be understood within the wider context and history of international law, including trajectories of colonialism and economic resource exploitation. Although rights of nature approaches may offer a path towards a greener international law, this path should not be followed in a way that reproduces problematic, homogenising aspects of international law, but instead centres human relationality with nature in place. Instead, we argue that there are important lessons to be learnt from transnational attempts to protect and implement rights of nature and legal personhood, especially where models are informed by Indigenous peoples’ relationships with nature.

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Published date: 28 April 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 498063
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498063
ISSN: 0167-6768
PURE UUID: 941f2cd5-c524-442e-8dcb-84a696b29ecc
ORCID for Jérémie Gilbert: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1377-3494

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Date deposited: 07 Feb 2025 17:30
Last modified: 08 Feb 2025 03:21

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Contributors

Author: Jérémie Gilbert ORCID iD
Author: Elizabeth Macpherson
Author: Emily Jones
Author: Julia Dehm
Editor: D. Dam-de Jong
Editor: F. Amtenbrink

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