Online ISSN 1759-7196, Print ISSN 1759-7188
The relationship between human rights and the environment is fascinating, uneasy and increasingly urgent. This international journal provides a strategic academic forum for an extended interdisciplinary and multi-layered conversation that explores emergent possibilities, existing tensions, and multiple implications of entanglements between human and non-human forms of liveliness. We invite critical engagements on these themes, especially as refracted through human rights and environmental law, politics, policy-making and community level activisms.
CONTENIDO
Editorial Climate strikes to Extinction Rebellion: environmental activism shaping our future
Benjamin J. Richardson
Can climate activism deliver transformative change? Extinction Rebellion, business and people power
Neil Gunningham
Toward an ethics of decolonizing allyship in climate organizing: reflections on Extinction Rebellion Vancouver
Dana James and Trevor Mack
Morally motivated protest in the face of orthodoxy – environmental crisis and dissent in Australian democracy
Francine Rochford
Exploring legitimization strategies for contested uses of citizen-generated data for policy
Anna Berti Suman, Sven Schade and Yasuhito Abe
Victim, litigant, activist, messiah: the child in a time of climate change
Nicole Rogers
Between the commodity and the gift: the Coastal GasLink pipeline and the contested temporalities of Canadian and Witsuwit’en law
Tyler McCreary
A colonized COP: Indigenous exclusion and youth climate justice activism at the United Nations climate change negotiations
Corrie Grosse and Brigid Mark
Extinction Rebellion and environmental activism – the XR interviews
Claire Burgess and Rupert Read
Green parties and environmental activism
Paul Manly, Jonathan Bartley and Chlöe Swarbrick