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Gendering International Legal Responses to Environmental Chronic Emergencies

Edited by: Sara De Vido, Deborah Russo, Enzamaria Tramontana

ISBN13: 9781035367788
To be Published: January 2026
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £110.00





This incisive book presents a gendered perspective on chronic environmental emergencies including climate change, biodiversity loss, pollution, and environmental degradation. Derived from the innovative concept of slow violence, the phenomenon of chronic environmental emergencies considers situational vulnerabilities and the disproportionate impact of these events on women.

Providing an ecofeminist assessment of chronic emergencies, as well as their effects on actors, legal obligations, and possible remedies, the book examines the interplay between feminism, the environment, and international law. Chapters conceptualize environmental chronic emergencies, analysing their impact across time and in various contexts spanning slow-onset events, responsibility and liability, and due diligence obligations. The global contributor team uses gendered and post-colonial approaches to advance the legal debate beyond disasters to more subtle forms of oppression, particularly towards indigenous women and female health. Ultimately, the book looks ahead at new interdisciplinary avenues of research which address the gradual deterioration of ecosystems and its effect on insidious forms of oppression through deep-rooted structural inequalities.

Subjects:
Environmental Law
Contents:
Foreword ix
Gendering International Legal Responses to Environmental Chronic Emergencies: Introduction xi
Sara De Vido, Deborah Russo and Enzamaria Tramontana

PART I CONCEPTUALIZING ENVIRONMENTAL CHRONIC EMERGENCIES
1. Feminist legal methods and environmental chronic emergencies: challenging the anthropocentric and
androcentric international legal system 2
Sara De Vido
2. Moving beyond an approach based on crisis and disasters to address environmental chronic emergencies 24
Deborah Russo
3. Environmental chronic emergencies, women’s inequality, and international law 43
Enzamaria Tramontana
4. Taking the long view: what environmental chronic emergencies require of states 66
Karen Morrow

PART II ENVIRONMENTAL CHRONIC EMERGENCIES ACROSS TIME
5. A fear of falling? The mineshaft as ‘environmental chronic emergency’ in modern Cornwall 89
Timothy Cooper
6. Minamata disease as an environmental chronic emergency: institutional failures and global lessons 109
Shuichi Furuya
7. Environmental chronic emergencies and the challenge of temporality 129
David M. Scott
8. Environmental chronic emergencies and future generations 148
Laura Magi

PART III ENVIRONMENTAL CHRONIC EMERGENCIES IN CONTEXT
9. Environmental chronic emergencies, slow-onset events and other anthropocentric dilemmas in times of climate crisis: the need for a re-conception 167
Monica Feria-Tinta
10. States and corporations in the context of environmental chronic emergencies: responsibility and liability at the
crossroad 184
Patricio Barbirotto
11. Due diligence obligations and environmental chronic emergencies 205
Björnstjern Baade
12. The duty to cooperate in addressing the adverse impact of environmental chronic emergencies: ensuring gender-sensitive responses 226
Martina Sardo
13. Transforming slow violence into social justice: the quest for reparation for environmental chronic emergencies 250
Francesca Tammone

PART IV CONCLUDING REMARKS
14. Conclusion 274
Meghan Campbell