Earth jurisprudence represents an alternative approach to the law based on the belief that nature has rights. In this view, a river has the right to flow, species have the right to continue to exist in the wild, and ecosystems have the right to adapt and evolve over time. Proponents of Earth jurisprudence argue that, by treating nature as exploitable resources, contemporary legal systems actively promote environmental harms. Recognising rights of nature, they argue, will transform core values and inspire social changes that promote economic development which respects nature’s limits. Since 2006, rights of nature have been recognised by some sub-federal public bodies in the United States and by the governments of Ecuador and Bolivia. This pa...
This thesis investigates whether and if so how the incorporation of a concept from an indigenous wor...
Governance approaches that foster more nurturing nature-human relationships are needed to reconnect ...
Who belongs to communities of justice in the Anthropocene? While Western and non-Western traditions ...
Two Andean countries – Ecuador and Bolivia – have politically recognized the rights of nature, an id...
The Rights of Nature is an emerging concept within sustainable development, it states that the curre...
To date, international processes associated with sustainable development have not led to an internat...
An international consensus of scientific experts is now demanding immediate action in response to ...
Nature’s rights approaches are being developed as an alternative legal means to secure justice for n...
In recent years, a growing number of States have granted legal status to natural entities. First, th...
In 2008, Ecuador became the first country in the world to make nature a subject of constitutional ri...
La naturaleza ha sido, por largo tiempo, una voz no escuchada por el derecho. Sin embargo, desde los...
Juridical protection of the rights of nature is steadily emerging in several legal systems and in pu...
Rights of nature is a discourse which proposes that, like humans, the natural world should be afford...
The recognition of rights to nature by the Constitution of Ecuador sets a new normative scenario for...
One of the most significant events in recent comparative constitutional law on environmental issues ...
This thesis investigates whether and if so how the incorporation of a concept from an indigenous wor...
Governance approaches that foster more nurturing nature-human relationships are needed to reconnect ...
Who belongs to communities of justice in the Anthropocene? While Western and non-Western traditions ...
Two Andean countries – Ecuador and Bolivia – have politically recognized the rights of nature, an id...
The Rights of Nature is an emerging concept within sustainable development, it states that the curre...
To date, international processes associated with sustainable development have not led to an internat...
An international consensus of scientific experts is now demanding immediate action in response to ...
Nature’s rights approaches are being developed as an alternative legal means to secure justice for n...
In recent years, a growing number of States have granted legal status to natural entities. First, th...
In 2008, Ecuador became the first country in the world to make nature a subject of constitutional ri...
La naturaleza ha sido, por largo tiempo, una voz no escuchada por el derecho. Sin embargo, desde los...
Juridical protection of the rights of nature is steadily emerging in several legal systems and in pu...
Rights of nature is a discourse which proposes that, like humans, the natural world should be afford...
The recognition of rights to nature by the Constitution of Ecuador sets a new normative scenario for...
One of the most significant events in recent comparative constitutional law on environmental issues ...
This thesis investigates whether and if so how the incorporation of a concept from an indigenous wor...
Governance approaches that foster more nurturing nature-human relationships are needed to reconnect ...
Who belongs to communities of justice in the Anthropocene? While Western and non-Western traditions ...