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A Research Agenda for Human Rights and the Environment

Edited by: Dina Lupin

ISBN13: 9781800379374
Published: March 2023
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £90.00



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Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary. Forward-looking and innovative, Elgar Research Agendas are an essential resource for PhD students, scholars and anybody who wants to be at the forefront of research.

This important book creatively explores and uncovers new ways of understanding the intersections between human rights and the environment, as well as introducing readers to the ways in which we can use new methodologies, case studies and approaches in human rights to address environmental issues.

Interdisciplinary in nature, this Research Agenda recognises and engages with the short-comings and problematic framings of traditional approaches to human rights and environmental law. Keeping these limits and failings unflinchingly in view, it identifies potential opportunities to maximise the law’s effectiveness, providing readers with a thought-provoking agenda for future research. Contributions also call for resistant, transformative and inclusive research and practice in the area of human rights and the environment, using human rights law to center the knowledge, practices, laws and priorities of marginalised groups in addressing environmental injustice.

This dynamic Research Agenda will be an essential tool for PhD students and scholars in international law, environmental law and human rights, as well as providing a springboard for geographers and anthropologists to further their knowledge of the evolving interface between human rights and the environment.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties, Environmental Law
Contents:
1. Introduction: A Research Agenda for Human Rights and the Environment
Dina Lupin
PART I. REPOSITIONING MARGINALISED EPISTEMIC AND EXPERIENTIAL CONTRIBUTIONS
2. Towards a disability-inclusive environment and human health research agenda
Sarah L. Bell
3. Indigenous Peoples’ rights and the politics of climate change
Anna F. Laing
4. A critical peasants’ rights perspective for human rights and the environment: Leveraging the UN
Declaration on the Rights of Peasants
Amanda Lyons and Ana María Suárez Franco
PART II REINVENTING HUMAN RIGHTS TOOLS AND APPROACHES
5. Racial segregation, water disconnection and human rights litigation: An examination of the use of law to challenge structural racism in Detroit and Johannesburg
Jackie Dugard
6. The right to consultation is a right to be heard
Dina Lupin and Leo Townsend
7. Rethinking ‘vulnerability’: Widening the scope to conceptualize ‘vulnerability’ for the human right to water
Daphina Misiedjan
PART III RELOCATING RIGHTS IN OVERLOOKED SPACES
8. Climate change and human rights in the overseas colonized territories of the state
Miriam Cullen and Céline Brassart Olsen
9. Human rights law as a gap-filler: The invisibility of climate vulnerability in international climate change law
Linnéa Nordlander
PART IV RETHINKING HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE ENVIRONMENT
10. Indigenous knowledge and new materialism
Tina Sikka, Elizabeth Mills and Nisha Sikka
11. Decoloni-zation/ality of ‘protected areas’: A South African perspective
Clive Vinti
12. The human right to a healthy environment and the rights of racialized groups: Applying critical race theory as a framework for (re)constructing environmental rights through foundational transformation
Natalia Urzola Gutiérrez

Index