Literature Review

Learn about cutting-edge Earth Law developments in journals from across the world! You can sort by topic, date, geography, and other categories.

Learn about cutting-edge Earth Law developments in journals from across the world!

Journal
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Questions and Answers about the Effects of Ozone Depletion, UV Radiation, and Climate on Humans and the Environment. Supplement of the 2022 Assessment Report of the UNEP Environmental Effects Assessment Panel

Mads P. Sulbaek Andersen, Anthony L. Andrady, Alkiviadis F. Bais, Paul Barnes et al.

2023

United Nations

March 7, 2025

This collection of Questions & Answers (Q&As) was prepared by the Environmental Effects Assessment Panel (EEAP) of the Montreal Protocol under the umbrella of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). The document complements EEAP’s Quadrennial Assessment 2022 (https://ozone. unep.org/science/assessment/eeap) and provides interesting and useful information for policymakers, the general public, teachers, and scientists, written in an easy-to-understand language.

No items found.
Journal
Proposal for Adaptation Fund Climate Innovation Accelerator (United Nations Environment Programme)

Daouda Ben Oumar Ndiaye

2023

United Nations

March 7, 2025

n/a

No items found.
Journal
Legal Responsibility for Environmental Damage Caused by Russian and Ukranian Wars: International Humanitarian and Criminal Law Perspectives

Rafi Nasrulloh Muhammad Romdoni

2023

March 6, 2025

Not only inflicted human casualities, the war between Russia and Ukraine, also injured the environment. Russia's discriminating attacks on essential objects such as gas, energy, oil, and mining infrastructure become the most significant root cause. UNEP affirmed that the attacks resulted in widespread water, soil and air pollution, as well as a significant deterioration in Ukraine's ecosystem stability. Accordingly, the study intends to examine the framework of international humanitarian and criminal law, specifically in terms of enviromental protection, as well as to analyze accountability before the International Criminal Court. The study employed doctrinal method involving a statutory and conceptual approach. In this case, relevant legal instruments such as the 1949 Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols, as well as the Rome Statute, were being examined. Furthermore, the study is also certified by the evolution of legal doctrines in books, jounals, and other credible sources. According to the findings, humanitarian law, which is underpinned by customary international law, protects the environment slightly better than international criminal law. In short, the state bears multiple duties for environmental damage caused by the outbreak of war. Individual accountability before the ICC, on the other hand, is being overlooked. It is due to the Rome Statute's flaws, which include vagueness in the formulation of the articles, stringent standards for proof of environmental damage, and bias in proving mens rea. As a result, improvements in the enforcement of international crimes (war crimes and related types) that cause environmental damage are urgently required

Ecocide
Human Environmental Rights
Journal
Criminalizing Environmental Degradation and Devastation: New Prospects for the ICC Rome Statute?

Kelly Pisimisi

2023

March 6, 2025

n/a

No items found.
Journal
Decentring the Human or Rescaling the State? Grassroots Movements for the ‘Rights’ of Nature in the United States

Erin Fitz-Henry

2024

June 6, 2024

Despite recent debates about whether ‘rights of nature’ (RoN) are sufficiently de-colonizing, the extent to which they are aligned with, emergent from, or appropriative of Indigenous values and worldviews, their ability to be co-opted by neo-extractivist states and corporations, and the degree to which they remain guided by the assumptions of Western liberal individualism, to date there has been considerably less attention paid to the fact that movements for RoN are challenging not just legal anthropocentrism, but the decision-making authority of states. Drawing on interviews with rights of nature activists, organizers, and lawyers in the mid-western US state of Ohio and on close readings of recent court cases, this chapter demonstrates that, when approached ethnographically, these on-the-ground efforts to legally acknowledge the rights-bearing status of non-humans raise important political-economic questions about the limitations of state environmental regulatory processes that require a reorientation in some of the scholarship on the rights of nature.

Rights of Nature
Journal
Comparative Analysis of Rights of Nature (RoN) Case Studies Worldwide: Features of Emergence and Design

Viktoria Kahui, Claire W. Armstrong, Margrethe Aanesen

2024

June 6, 2024

We provide a descriptive comparative analysis of features related to emergence and design among 14 Rights of Nature (RoN) case studies worldwide. For analysis, we develop a schematic roadmap in which we categorise RoN into case studies with public guardianship and ones with appointed guardians (termed Environmental Legal Personhoods (ELPs) with further sub-categories of indirect, direct and living ELPs). Our findings suggest that RoN case studies emerged under similar circumstances where existing governance structures had been unable to protect natural environments from continued economic (urban, agricultural and industrial) activity by multiple economic actors. The strong role of local community and Indigenous Peoples in advocacy for RoN point to a divide between in situ communities and external economic agents, allowing for eco-centric value systems to emerge in juxtaposition to existing governance structures. We find that the design of RoN, however, varies in geographical entity, legal framework, legal status and guardianship. Poorly defined liability of guardians and economic agents have led to the overturning of two case studies, which stands in contrast to well-defined rights and liabilities in other case studies, suggesting that attention to liability may be an important building block for the effectiveness of RoN to protect biodiversity.

Rights of Nature
Journal
Eco-Social Work and the Healing and Transformative Powers of Nature: Towards an Eco-Centric Practice

Anette Lytzen, Cathy Richardson Kineweskwêw

2024

June 6, 2024

This chapter addresses how eco-social work that includes Nature-based intervention, therapy, or healing and is rooted in eco-centric worldviews can play a central role in shifting our current human-centred paradigms towards eco-centric paradigms, where humans live in more reciprocal and respectful relationships with Nature and each other—and where the rights of Nature are recognised. In May 2022, the International Federation of Social Workers adopted a new policy for social workers, ‘The Role of Social Workers in Advancing a New Eco-Social World’, recognising that the interconnectedness of all life in our ecosystem is integral in the guiding ethics of social workers and affirming the rights of Nature. To be part of co-creating truly sustainable ways of living, social work must be rooted in eco-centric cosmologies and worldviews that affirm the interdependence and interconnectedness of all life. We explore what social work can look like from eco-centric perspectives and approaches when the principles of Earth Jurisprudence are applied and placed in dialogue with the new policy. Through a case study of a Nature programme offered to women at Danish shelters for victims of partner violence, based a.o. on Shinrin-yoku, we show the healing and transformative powers of Nature and the possibilities for including Nature-based intervention, therapy, or healing in eco-social work.

Rights of Nature
Journal
Rights of Nature

Martin Hultman

2024

June 6, 2024

The industrial modern fossil fueled societies are founded in, and structured by, a worldview in which we humans have considered us to stand above nature with a boundless right to dominate, control and exploit it. What if we instead acknowledge that human survival is intimately linked to nature’s right to flourish? Recognizing Rights of Nature (RoN) in legislation is a system innovation that has been tried around the world in constitutions (Ecuador, Bolivian and Peru), environmental law (Australia, New Zealand), and ordinances of the USA and Spain as well as the international scene, where it is found in the UN Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth with unexpectedly good results in dealing with complex environmental issues. However, there is still much research to be done when it comes to how understand RoN, how to justify it morally, and how to implement RoN locally if it will have local to global impact.

Rights of Nature
Journal
An Ecocentric Turn: Emerging Narratives in the Growing U.S. Rights of Nature Movement

Raechel E. Youngberg

2024

June 6, 2024

This research project utilizes the Narrative Policy Analysis framework to analyze print news media coverage of the Rights of Nature (RoN) movement in the United States. This burgeoning movement draws upon Indigenous principles of animism and interconnectedness to recognize the existence rights and legal personhood of non-human animals, plants, and ecosystems. This project highlights the legal and legislative challenges the RoN movement has faced. Including the complexities of attempting to incorporate Indigenous epistemologies into a colonialist legal system and highlighting the narrative strategies and emerging coalitions present in the U.S.-based movement.

Rights of Nature
Journal
Rethinking Nature's Rights

Yael Lifshitz

2024

December 12, 2025

Rights of Nature
Journal
Relational Representation: Speaking with and not about Nature

Lidia Cano Pecharroman and Erin O'Donnell

2024

June 6, 2024

The transnational movement to recognise the rights of Nature continues to fuel experimentation by a growing number of jurisdictions in legal form, content, powers, and governance arrangements. In this paper, we focus on the mechanisms through which Nature is represented in various ways. There is enormous diversity in representational arrangements, but there is no clarity on precisely who should be representing Nature, or how Nature can be represented in human spaces, or even what the intent of this representation is (or should be). We describe a spectrum of representation that ranges from speaking about, to speaking for, to speaking with the ... more

Rights of Nature
Journal
Can Rights of Nature Contribute to Enhanced Environmental Protection in Ireland?

Julian Suarez

2024

June 6, 2024

Several sectors of Irish society have put forward rights of nature as a way to further enhance environmental protection in the country and help curb environmental degradation. In light of rights of nature developments in other jurisdictions, this piece presents rights of nature in their social, economic, and legal context, and summarises their reception by legal scholars. This portrayal will provide a basis for analysing the two main Irish rights of nature legal propositions and assess, albeit in preliminary fashion, whether these initiatives – if enacted – would further enhance environmental protection in Ireland.

Rights of Nature