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About this book
For those troubled by environmental harm on a global scale and its deeply unequal effects, this book explains how international law structures ecological degradation and environmental injustice while claiming to protect the environment. It identifies how central legal concepts such as sovereignty, jurisdiction, territory, development, environment, labour and human rights make inaccurate and unsustainable assumptions about the natural world and systemically reproduce environmental degradation and injustice. To avert socioecological crises, we must not only unpack but radically rework our understandings of nature and its relationship with law. We propose more sustainable and equitable ways to remake law's relationship with nature by drawing on diverse disciplines and sociocultural traditions that have been marginalized within international law. Influenced by Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL), postcolonialism and decoloniality, and inspired by Indigenous knowledges, cosmology, mythology and storytelling, this book lays the groundwork for an epistemological shift in the way humans conceptualize the relationship between law and nature.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-title
- Title page
- Copyright information
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- Deconstructing the Legal Architecture of the Anthropocene
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Where Is the Environment? Locating Nature in International Law
- Part I Locating Nature in International Law: Towards New Thinking
- Part II Unmaking International Law
- Part III Alternatives and Remakings
- Conclusion: Remaking International Law
- Index