
pmid: 37200429
We review the use of science by lawmakers and courts in implementing or rejecting legal rights for nature in Ecuador, India, the United States, and other jurisdictions where some type of rights of nature have been recognized in the legal system. We then use the “right to evolve” to exemplify how interdisciplinary work can (i) help courts effectively define what this right might entail; (ii) inform how it might be applied in different circumstances; and (iii) provide a template for how scientists and legal scholars can generate the interdisciplinary scholarship necessary to understand and implement the growing body of rights-of-nature laws, and environmental law more generally. We conclude by pointing to what further research is needed to understand and effectively implement the growing body of rights-of-nature laws.
Annan rättsvetenskaplig forskning, Conservation of Natural Resources, Kriminologi, Civil Rights, India, Criminology, Ecuador, Other Legal Research, United States, Nature
Annan rättsvetenskaplig forskning, Conservation of Natural Resources, Kriminologi, Civil Rights, India, Criminology, Ecuador, Other Legal Research, United States, Nature
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