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 Painful excavations: extractivism, dispossession, rights and resistance
Anna Grear
Distribution without representation? Beyond the rights of nature in the southern Ecuadorian highlands
Erin Fitz-Henry
The 2017 Inter-American Court’s Advisory Opinion: changing the paradigm for international environmental law in the Anthropocene
Maria Antonia Tigre and Natalia Urzola
Environmental struggles in Aboriginal homelands: Indigenizing conservation in Australia
Freya Mathews
Still Lives: a beautiful science
Lee Harrop and Jana Norman
Still Lives
Lee Harrop
An engraved invitation to consider human–earth relations: thinking non-dualism through the mining-based art practice of Lee Harrop
Jana Norman
Artist statement
Katerina Teaiwa
Flight of the frigate bird: Ocean Island, phosphate mining and Project Banaba
Mandy Treagus
Book review: Kinnari I Bhatt, Concessionaires, Financiers and Communities: Implementing Indigenous Peoples’ Rights to Land in Transnational Development (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2020) 222 pp.
Parisa Zangeneh
Book review: Erin O’Donnell, Legal Rights for Rivers: Competition, Collaboration and Water Governance (Routledge, Abingdon 2019) 202 pp.
Meg Good