河流作为生命:法律上的权利,但没有水权?

IF 1.3 Q1 LAW Griffith Law Review Pub Date : 2020-10-01 DOI:10.1080/10383441.2020.1881304
E. O’Donnell
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引用次数: 21

摘要

自2017年以来,世界上一些最受喜爱和标志性的河流被法律承认为法人和/或生物实体,拥有一系列法律权利和保护。这些深刻的法律变革可以改变人与河流之间的关系,并且是土著人民和环境倡导者持续领导的结果。本文对新西兰、印度、孟加拉国和哥伦比亚的河流和湖泊的法律和/或生活人格进行了比较分析,以确定特定河流的法律地位,并强调了承认河流为法人和/或生活实体同时又否认河流流动权利的令人不安的趋势。因此,河流的新法律地位非但没有在法律上赋予河流抵抗生存威胁的能力,反而可能使管理河流以防止其退化和丧失变得更加困难。这篇论文强调了河流的“灭绝问题”,环境法承认了新的非人类生物,同时又剥夺了它们生存所需的一些特定法律权利,这加剧了河流的“灭绝问题”。本文还展示了对河流状况的多元分析如何有助于确定解决这一问题的一些潜在方法。
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Rivers as living beings: rights in law, but no rights to water?
ABSTRACT Since 2017, some of the most beloved and iconic rivers in the world have been recognised in law as legal persons and/or living entities, with a range of legal rights and protections. These profound legal changes can transform the relationship between people and rivers, and are the result of ongoing leadership from Indigenous peoples and environmental advocates. This paper uses a comparative analysis of the legal and/or living personhood of rivers and lakes in Aotearoa New Zealand, India, Bangladesh, Colombia to identify the legal status of specific rivers, and highlight the disturbing trend of recognising rivers as legal persons and/or living entities whilst also denying rivers the right to flow. Rather than empowering rivers in law to resist existential threats, the new legal status of rivers may thus make it even more difficult to manage rivers to prevent their degradation and loss. This paper highlights an ‘extinction problem’ for rivers that environmental law has exacerbated, by recognising new non-human living beings whilst simultaneously denying them some of the specific legal rights they need to remain in existence. The paper also shows how a pluralist analysis of the status of rivers can help to identify some potential ways to address this problem.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
8.30%
发文量
25
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