There is broad scientific consensus on the anthropogenic roots of the environmental crisis, whether we think about biodiversity decline, climate change, pollution or, in general, about the increasing scarcity of ecological space for living entities. Unlike humans, other living beings have no notion of crisis and are probably not bothered by such highly abstract concerns. When a crisis occurs, non-humans either adapt or vanish, whereas humans may see it lurking ahead and become anxious. This human urge to reflect on the state of nature and the role of humanity is manifest in the new concept of the Anthropocene. Originally, human rights and environmental crisis entered the public sphere as separate themes but from the 1970s, they began to app...
Responding to climate change needs a global perspective that combines emphases on the dignity and wo...
In the 20th Century it became increasingly clear that a clean and healthy environment is the resourc...
Questions of sustainability will be of crucial importance for the twenty-first century. But do we ha...
Some scientists claim we live today in the "Anthropocene era" - the latest period in the history of...
Human rights are considered ethical demands that operate at an elevated juridical level. They have b...
Despite important victories, human rights have been unable to respond effectively to the many deeply...
There are growing trends in the human rights to substantially extend the values to protect the envir...
The idea of human rights protection has gone a long path through history – from ancient times in its...
The degree of human progress is determined not only by the level of development of the productive f...
Deeply significant concerns lie behind contemporary efforts to bring human rights law and environmen...
This Chapter presents a constructive critique of environmental human rights. The analysis is ‘constr...
Ecology as a science today, mainly rejects anthropocentrism in favour of nonhuman-centred ethics. Su...
The earliest, and still most influential, human rights texts were drafted at a time when environment...
Today, the Nature-History relations are the ecological ones: we are living in a global eco-bio-techn...
The animal rights movement, both as an activist social movement and as a philosophical-moral movemen...
Responding to climate change needs a global perspective that combines emphases on the dignity and wo...
In the 20th Century it became increasingly clear that a clean and healthy environment is the resourc...
Questions of sustainability will be of crucial importance for the twenty-first century. But do we ha...
Some scientists claim we live today in the "Anthropocene era" - the latest period in the history of...
Human rights are considered ethical demands that operate at an elevated juridical level. They have b...
Despite important victories, human rights have been unable to respond effectively to the many deeply...
There are growing trends in the human rights to substantially extend the values to protect the envir...
The idea of human rights protection has gone a long path through history – from ancient times in its...
The degree of human progress is determined not only by the level of development of the productive f...
Deeply significant concerns lie behind contemporary efforts to bring human rights law and environmen...
This Chapter presents a constructive critique of environmental human rights. The analysis is ‘constr...
Ecology as a science today, mainly rejects anthropocentrism in favour of nonhuman-centred ethics. Su...
The earliest, and still most influential, human rights texts were drafted at a time when environment...
Today, the Nature-History relations are the ecological ones: we are living in a global eco-bio-techn...
The animal rights movement, both as an activist social movement and as a philosophical-moral movemen...
Responding to climate change needs a global perspective that combines emphases on the dignity and wo...
In the 20th Century it became increasingly clear that a clean and healthy environment is the resourc...
Questions of sustainability will be of crucial importance for the twenty-first century. But do we ha...