法律前沿的人与森林:导言

Helen Dancer
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引用次数: 3

摘要

在全球范围内,森林砍伐和森林冲突发生在相互竞争的主张、叙述和世界观的前沿,这些主张、叙述和世界观通过领土、规范秩序和对人与自然的暴力形式来表达。决策者尚未找到有效解决这一人类与森林关系危机的解决方案,同时对森林居民也公平。本期特刊以跨学科的理论和实证研究为基础,探讨了法律前沿的人林关系,回应了这一挑战。作者探讨了法律如何影响人类与森林关系的生态、文化和道德基础,以及超越以经济和权利为基础的主流法律框架,进一步发展森林治理社会生态关系的法律层面的必要性。这些贡献作为一个整体突出了共同构建法律的重要性,这些法律在文化上位于森林的地方意义中,并以非殖民化的变革方式与全球、国家和其他地方规范秩序相互作用。这为人类和森林开辟了一个新的法律边界的可能性,它具有多方面的超越人类的非法形式。
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People and forests at the legal frontier: Introduction
Abstract Across the globe, deforestation and conflicts over forests are taking place on a frontier of competing claims, narratives and worldviews, expressed through territoriality, normative orders, and forms of violence against people and nature. Policymakers have yet to find solutions that effectively address this crisis over human-forest relations in ways that are also equitable for forest peoples. This special issue responds to this challenge with an interdisciplinary collection of theoretical and empirically grounded studies that explore human-forest relations at the legal frontier. The authors explore how law affects the ecological, cultural and moral foundations of human-forest relationships, and the need to go beyond dominant economic and rights-based legal framings, towards developing further legal dimensions of socio-ecological relations for forest governance. The contributions as a whole highlight the importance of co-constructing laws that are culturally situated in local meanings of forest and interact with global, state and other local normative orders in decolonial, transformative ways. This opens the possibility of a new legal frontier for people and forests of multidimensional more-than-human forms of interlegality.
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期刊介绍: As the pioneering journal in this field The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law (JLP) has a long history of publishing leading scholarship in the area of legal anthropology and legal pluralism and is the only international journal dedicated to the analysis of legal pluralism. It is a refereed scholarly journal with a genuinely global reach, publishing both empirical and theoretical contributions from a variety of disciplines, including (but not restricted to) Anthropology, Legal Studies, Development Studies and interdisciplinary studies. The JLP is devoted to scholarly writing and works that further current debates in the field of legal pluralism and to disseminating new and emerging findings from fieldwork. The Journal welcomes papers that make original contributions to understanding any aspect of legal pluralism and unofficial law, anywhere in the world, both in historic and contemporary contexts. We invite high-quality, original submissions that engage with this purpose.
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