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 William Webster, Robert Weatherley


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Indigenous Environmental Rights: Towards a Holistic Regime

Edited by: Jessika Eichler, Mario G. Aguilera

ISBN13: 9781009646994
To be Published: July 2026
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £105.00





This volume makes a legal theoretical contribution to the emerging regime of indigenous environmental rights, drawing on the law, theory, sociological and anthropological approaches. Firstly, it introduces key developments in the field of international human rights law and international environmental law, dealing with contemporary trends but also foundational principles and rights. It then addresses one of the most influential strands, that of (transformative) legal pluralism and its decolonising effects on the law. And in a final part, it uncovers a known conceptual divide, distinguishing between anthropocentric and eco-centric approaches, thereby identifying key developments in the human rights field and rights of nature discourses.

The book brings together experts in the field and also creates the space for scholarly dialogue, conceptually and beyond, which ultimately provides answers and directions in the field of indigenous environmental rights, to newcomers and specialised scholars alike.

  • Provides a comprehensive and systematizing account of indigenous environmental rights
  • Develops theory on the subject-matter providing insights beyond empirical data to allow for theoretical findings to be discussed and transmitted to readers
  • Addresses key developments in the field of international human rights law, international environmental law, as well as constitutional law and regional developments

Subjects:
Environmental Law
Contents:
Foreword
Preface
Introductory remarks: indigenous environmental rights – conceptual considerations
Part I: Amidst International Human Rights Law and Environmental Legal Landscapes: International OrdersExamined
1. Tracing indigenous environmental rights: a critical view of international human rights law
2. Indigenous rights under the convention on biological diversity: reinforcing and expanding human rights law
Part II: Beyond the 'Human' in Indigenous Environmental Law? Impressions from a Dualistic Debate
3. Rights of nature as symbol and ritual: recognition of indigenous cosmovisions within western legal ontology
4. The rights of nature and the right to territory of indigenous peoples: decolonising ecocentrism
5. Rights of nature: the biocultural approach and indigenous customary law in Latin America
Part III: Decolonising the Law: What Place for (Transformative) Legal Pluralism?
6. Mapuche Law (Az Mapu), legal pluralism, and transmodernity: possibilities and limitations of contextual environmental justice
7. The religious dimensions of indigenous environmental rights: disputes overlLand and pathways forward