Environmental Rights Between Constitutional Law and Local Context: Reflections on a Moving Target

IF 1.5 Q1 LAW German Law Journal Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.1017/glj.2022.68
Dirk Hanschel, Mario G. Aguilera Bravo, Bayar Dashpurev, A. K. Idris
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Abstract

Abstract Environmental rights such as the right to a sound environment and rights of nature, while playing an increasingly important role in global environmental governance and protection, frequently do not correspond to articulations of fundamental experiences of injustice by communities particularly affected by serious environmental degradation caused by, for example, extractive activities or major infrastructure projects. We present three empirically grounded case studies that employ concepts and methods from anthropology to demonstrate this. The work is still in progress, but sufficiently well advanced to present some findings. Our ethnographic research in Ethiopia and Mongolia reveals that vulnerable local communities take recourse to constitutional environmental rights far less often than expected. The reasons for this range from rule-of-law issues to local perceptions of vulnerability and relevant norms. Conversely, where environmental rights are demanded or claimed at the local level, they are often not translated adequately into the law of the state. Our case study on Ecuador, where rights of nature as a specific type of environmental rights have been included in the constitution, shows that transfers from local practice, while potentially having a transformative effect, may lead to conceptual selectivity, ambiguity, lack of clarity, and overlaps with existing state norms and, hence, redundancies. Environmental rights are, therefore, a moving target whose concrete added value hinges on context—as methods of law and anthropology serve to illustrate.
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宪法与地方语境下的环境权利:对一个运动目标的思考
环境权利,如良好环境权和自然权利,虽然在全球环境治理和保护中发挥着越来越重要的作用,但往往与受采掘活动或重大基础设施项目等造成的严重环境退化影响的社区所表达的不公正的基本经验不相符。我们提出三个基于经验的案例研究,运用人类学的概念和方法来证明这一点。这项工作仍在进行中,但已经取得了足够的进展,可以提出一些发现。我们在埃塞俄比亚和蒙古的民族志研究表明,脆弱的当地社区诉诸宪法环境权利的频率远低于预期。造成这种情况的原因多种多样,从法治问题到当地对脆弱性的看法和相关规范。相反,在地方一级要求或主张环境权利的地方,它们往往没有充分转化为国家法律。我们对厄瓜多尔的案例研究表明,在厄瓜多尔,自然权利作为一种特定类型的环境权利已被纳入宪法,从当地实践中转移,虽然可能具有变革性的影响,但可能导致概念上的选择性、模糊性、缺乏明确性,并与现有的国家规范重叠,从而导致冗余。因此,环境权利是一个移动的目标,其具体的附加价值取决于环境——法律和人类学的方法可以说明这一点。
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来源期刊
German Law Journal
German Law Journal Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
7.70%
发文量
75
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