Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T17:01:33.975Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 October 2022

Marie-Catherine Petersmann
Affiliation:
Universiteit van Tilburg, The Netherlands
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
When Environmental Protection and Human Rights Collide
The Politics of Conflict Management by Regional Courts
, pp. 252 - 282
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bibliography

Abate, Randall S. (ed), What Can Animal Law Learn from Environmental Law? (Environmental Law Institute, 2015).Google Scholar
Adams, Jonathan S. and McShane, Thomas O., The Myth of Wild Africa: Conservation without Illusion (W. W. Norton & Company, 1992).Google Scholar
Adams, Michael, ‘Negotiating Nature: Collaboration and Conflicts between Aboriginal and Conservation Interests in New South Wales, Australia’ (2004) 20 Australian Journal of Environmental Education 3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Addaney, Michael and Oluborode Jegede, Ademola (eds), Human Rights and the Environment under African Union Law (Springer, 2020).Google Scholar
Agrawal, Arun and Redford, Kent, ‘Conservation and Displacement: An Overview?’ (2009) 7 Conservation and Society 1.Google Scholar
Aguila, Yann, ‘A Global Pact for the Environment: The Logical Outcome of 50 Years of International Environmental Law’ (2020) 12:14 Sustainability 5636.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aguila, Yann and Viñuales, Jorge E., ‘A Global Pact for the Environment: Conceptual Foundations’ (2019) 28:1 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 312.Google Scholar
Akande, Dapo et al. (eds), Human Rights and 21st Century Challenges: Poverty, Conflict, and the Environment (Oxford University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Alemanno, Alberto, ‘EU Risk Regulation and Science: The Role of Experts in Decision-Making and Judicial Review’ in Vos, Ellen (ed), European Risk Governance: Its Science, Its Inclusiveness and Its Effectiveness (Connex, 2008).Google Scholar
Ali Mekouar, Mohamed, ‘Le Droit à l’Environnement dans ses Rapports avec les Autres Droits de l’Homme’ in Kromarek, Pascale (ed), Environnement et Droits de l’Homme (UNESCO Publications, 1987).Google Scholar
Alogna, Ivano, Bakker, Christine and Gauci, Jean-Pierre (eds), Climate Change Litigation: Global Perspectives (Brill, 2021).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aloni, Omer, The League of Nations and the Protection of the Environment (Cambridge University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Alter, Karen J., The New Terrain of International Law: Courts, Politics, Rights (Princeton University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Altwicker, Tilmann, ‘Non-Universal Arguments under the European Convention on Human Rights’ (2020) 31:1 European Journal of International Law 101126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ambrus, Monika et al. (eds), The Role of ‘Experts’ in International and European Decision-Making Processes: Advisors, Decision Makers or Irrelevant Actors? (Cambridge University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Amechi, Emeka Polycarp, ‘Enhancing Environmental Protection and Socio-Economic Development in Africa: A Fresh Look at the Right to a General Satisfactory Environment under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights’ (2009) 5 Law, Environment and Development Journal 58.Google Scholar
Anaya, James, ‘Environmentalism, Human Rights and Indigenous Peoples: A Tale of Converging and Diverging Interests’ (1999/2000) 7 Buffalo Environmental Law Journal 1.Google Scholar
Anderson, David and Grove, Richard H. (eds), Conservation in Africa: Peoples, Policies and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 1989).Google Scholar
Anker, Kirsten et al. (eds), From Environmental Law to Ecological Law (Routledge, 2020).Google Scholar
Anton, Donald K. and Shelton, Dinah (eds), Environmental Protection and Human Rights (Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Aravamudan, Srinivas, ‘From Enlightenment to the Anthropocene: Vico Behind or Ahead of His Time?’ (2018) 47 Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture 7.Google Scholar
Argyrou, Vassos, The Logic of Environmentalism: Anthropology, Ecology, and Postcoloniality (Berghahn Books, 2005).Google Scholar
Averill, Marilyn, ‘Linking Climate Litigation and Human Rights’ (2009) 18 Review of European Community and International Environmental Law 139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atapattu, Sumudu A., Gonzalez, Carmen G. and Seck, Sara L. (eds), The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Justice and Sustainable Development (Cambridge University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Atapattu, Sumudu A. and Schapper, Andrea, Human Rights and the Environment: Key Issues (Routledge, 2019).Google Scholar
Avgerinopoulou, Dionysia-Theodora, Science-Based Lawmaking: How to Effectively Integrate Science in International Environmental Law (Springer, 2019).Google Scholar
Baetens, Freya (ed), The Legitimacy of Unseen Actors in International Adjudication (Cambridge University Press, 2019).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baetens, Freya and Caiado, José (eds), Frontiers of International Economic Law: Legal Tools to Confront Interdisciplinary Challenges (Brill Nijhoff, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banach, Edo, ‘The Roma and the Native Americans: Encapsulated Communities within Larger Constitutional Regimes’ (2002) 14 Florida Journal of International Law 353.Google Scholar
Barad, Karen, Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter (Duke University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Barbier De La Serre, Eric and Sibony, Anne-Lise, ‘Expert Evidence before the EC Courts’ (2008) 45:4 Common Market Law Review 941985.Google Scholar
Barritt, Emily, ‘The Story of Stewardship and Ecological Restoration’ in Afshin, Akhtar-Khavari and Benjamin, Richardson (eds), Ecological Restoration Law: Concepts and Case Studies (Routledge 2019), 72.Google Scholar
Bartel, Robyn et al. (eds), Rethinking Wilderness and the Wild Conflict, Conservation and Co-existence (Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
Bashford, Alison, Global Population: History, Geopolitics and Life on Earth (Columbia University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Bastian, Michelle et al. (eds), Participatory Research in More-than-Human Worlds (Routledge, 2017).Google Scholar
Bastida, Ana Elizabet, The Law and Governance of Mining and Minerals: A Global Perspective (Hart, 2020).Google Scholar
Bavikatte, Sanjay Kabir and Bennett, Tom, ‘Community Stewardship: The Foundation of Biocultural Rights’ (2015) 6 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bavikatte, Sanjay Kabir, Stewarding the Earth: Rethinking Property and the Emergence of Biocultural Rights (Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Behrens, Kevin, ‘Exploring African Holism with Respect to the Environment’ (2010) 19:4 Environmental Values 465484.Google Scholar
Black, C. F., The Land is the Source of the Law: A Dialogical Encounter with Indigenous Jurisprudence (Routledge, 2011).Google Scholar
Puig de la Bellacasa, Maria, Matters of Care: Speculative Ethics in More than Human Worlds (University of Minnesota Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Bennett, Joshua, Being Property Once Myself: Blackness and the End of Man (Harvard University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Bennett, Jane, Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things (Duke University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Besson, Samantha, ‘Community Interests in International Law: Whose Interests Are They and How Should We Best Identify Them?’ in Eyal, Benvenisti and Georg, Nolte (eds), Community Interests across International Law (Oxford University Press, 2018), 3649.Google Scholar
Bianchi, Andrea, Peat, Daniel and Windsor, Matthew (eds), Interpretation in International Law (Oxford University Press, 2015).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biermann, Frank, Earth System Governance: World Politics in the Anthropocene (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank, ‘The Case for a World Environment Organization’ (2000) 42:9 Environment Science and Policy for Sustainable Development 22.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank, ‘Common Concern of Humankind: The Emergence of a New Concept of International Environmental Law’ (1996) 34:4 Archiv des Völkerrechts 426481.Google Scholar
Birnie, Patricia, Boyle, Alan and Redgwell, Catherine, International Law and the Environment (3rd edn, Oxford University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Birrell, Kathleen and Matthews, Daniel, ‘Laws for the Anthropocene: Orientations, Encounters, Imaginaries’ (2020) 31:3 Law and Critique 233238.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birrell, Kathleen, Godden, Lee and Tehan, Maureen, ‘Climate Change and REDD+: Property as a Prism for Conceiving Indigenous Peoples’ Engagement’ (2012) 3 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 2.Google Scholar
Bleicher, Alena and Pehlken, Alexandra (eds), The Material Basis of Energy Transitions (Academic Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Santos, Boaventura de Sousa, Toward a New Legal Common Sense: Law, Globalization and Emancipation (2nd edn, Butterworths, 2002).Google Scholar
Bobby Banerjee, Subhabrata, ‘Who Sustains Whose Development? Sustainable Development and the Reinvention of Nature’ (2003) 24 Organization Studies 1.Google Scholar
Bodansky, Daniel, ‘The Legitimacy of International Governance: A Coming Challenge for International Environmental Law?’ (1999) 93 American Journal of International Law 596624.Google Scholar
Bonine, John E., ‘The Public’s Right to Enforce Environmental Law’ in Stec, Stephen (ed), Handbook on Access to Justice under the Aarhus Convention (REC, Szentendre 2003), 3137.Google Scholar
Bonneuil, Christophe and Fressoz, Jean-Batiste, L’Evénement Anthropocène: La Terre, l’histoire et nous (Broché, 2016).Google Scholar
Borgen, Christopher J., ‘Treaty Conflicts and Normative Fragmentation’ in Hollis, Duncan B. (ed) The Oxford Guide to Treaties (Oxford University Press, 2012), 448470.Google Scholar
Borgen, Christopher J., ‘Resolving Treaty Conflicts’ (2005) 37 George Washington International Law Review 573648.Google Scholar
Bosselmann, Klaus, ‘Environmental and Human Rights in Ethical Context’ in Grear, Anna and Kotzé, Louis J. (eds), Research Handbook on Human Rights and the Environment (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015), 531550.Google Scholar
Botzler, Richard G. and Armstrong, Susan J. (eds), Environmental Ethics: Divergence and Convergence (2nd edn, McGraw-Hill, 1998).Google Scholar
Boyd, David R., ‘Catalyst for Change: Evaluating Forty Years of Experience in Implementing the Right to a Healthy Environment’ in Knox, John H. and Pejan, Ramin (eds), The Human Right to a Healthy Environment (Cambridge University Press, 2018), 1741.Google Scholar
Boyle, Alan, ‘Human Rights and the Environment: Where Next?’ (2012) 23:3 European Journal of International Law 613.Google Scholar
Boyle, Alan, ‘Human Rights or Environmental Rights? A Reassessment’ (2006) 18 Fordham Environmental Law Review 471.Google Scholar
Boyle, Alan and Harrison, James, ‘Judicial Settlement of International Environmental Disputes: Current Problems’ (2013) 4 Journal of International Dispute Settlement 245.Google Scholar
Braidotti, Rosi, Posthuman Knowledge (Polity, 2019).Google Scholar
Braidotti, Rosi, ‘A Theoretical Framework for the Critical Posthumanities’ (2018) Theory, Culture & Society 131.Google Scholar
Brighton, Claire, ‘Unlikely Bedfellows: The Evolution of the Relationship between Environmental Protection and Development’ (2017) 66 International & Comparative Law Quarterly 209.Google Scholar
Brinks, Daniel M., ‘Access to What? Legal Agency and Access to Justice for Indigenous Peoples in Latin America’ (2019) 55:3 The Journal of Development Studies 348365.Google Scholar
Brown Weiss, Edith, ‘The Evolution of International Environmental Law’ (2011) 54 Japanese Yearbook of International Law 127.Google Scholar
Brown Weiss, Edith, In Fairness to Future Generations: International Law, Common Patrimony and Intergenerational Equity (Transnational Publishers, 1989).Google Scholar
Brown, Harrison, The Challenge of Man’s Future (Viking Press, 1954).Google Scholar
Brundtland Report, World Commission on Environment and Development: Our Common Future (Oxford University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Brunnée, Jutta, ‘“Common Interests” – Echoes from an Empty Shell? – Some Thoughts on Common Interests and International Environmental Law’ (1989) 49 Zeitschrift für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht 791808.Google Scholar
Burdon, Peter (ed), ‘The Earth Community and Ecological Jurisprudence’ (2013) 3 Oñati Socio-Legal Series 5.Google Scholar
Burdon, Peter (ed), Exploring Wild Law – The Philosophy of Earth Jurisprudence (Wakefield Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Burger, Michael, ‘Environmental Law/Environmental Literature’ (2013) 40 Ecology Law Quarterly 158.Google Scholar
Bürli, Nicole, Third-Party Interventions before the European Court of Human Rights: Amicus Curiae, Member-State and Third-Party Interventions (Intersentia, 2017).Google Scholar
Burns, William and Osofsky, Hari (eds), Adjudicating Climate Change (Cambridge University Press, 2009).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Çalı, Basak, ‘Authority’ in d’Aspremont, Jean and Singh, Sahib (eds), Concepts for International Law: Contributions to Disciplinary Thought (Edward Elgar, 2019), 3953.Google Scholar
Campbell, Tim E. J., ‘The Political Meaning of Stockholm: Third World Participation in the Environment Conference Process’ (1973) 8 Stanford Journal of International Studies 138.Google Scholar
Cambou, Dorothée, ‘The Impact of the Ban on Seal Products on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: A European Issue’ (2013) Yearbook of Polar Law 389415.Google Scholar
Cançado Trindade, Antônio Augusto, International Law for Humankind: Towards a New Jus Gentium (Martinus Nijhoff, 2010).Google Scholar
Cançado Trindade, Antônio Augusto, ‘Environmental Protection and the Absence of Restrictions on Human Rights’ in Mahoney, Kathleen E. and Mahoney, Paul (eds), Human Rights in the Twenty-First Century: A Global Challenge (Martinus Nijhoff, 1993).Google Scholar
Cançado Trindade, Antônio Augusto, ‘The Parallel Evolutions of International Human Rights Protection and of Environmental Protection and the Absence of Restrictions on the Exercise of Recognised Human Rights’ (1991) 13 Revista del Instituto Interamericano de Derechos Humanos 3576.Google Scholar
Trindade, Cançado, Augusto, Antônio and Leal, Barros, César, (eds), Human Rights and Environment (Fortaleza, 2017).Google Scholar
Cao, Deborah and White, Steven (eds), Animal Law and Welfare – International Perspectives (Springer, 2016).Google Scholar
Capra, Fritjof and Mattei, Ugo, The Ecology of Law: Toward a Legal System in Tune with Nature and Community (Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2015).Google Scholar
Cardesa-Salzmann, Antonio, ‘Constitutionalising Secondary Rules in Global Environmental Regimes: Non-compliance Procedures and the Enforcement of Multilateral Environmental Agreements’ (2012) 24 Journal of Environmental Law 103.Google Scholar
Carson, Rachel, Silent Spring (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1962).Google Scholar
Casey-Maslen, Stuart, The Right to Life under International Law: An Interpretative Manual (Cambridge University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh, The Climate of History in a Planetary Age (University of Chicago Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh, ‘Planetary Crises and the Difficulty of Being Modern’ (2018) 46 Millennium: Journal of International Studies 259.Google Scholar
Cernea, Michael M. and Mathur, Hari Mohan (eds), Can Compensation Prevent Impoverishment? Reforming Resettlement Through Investments and Benefit-Sharing (Oxford University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Cernea, Michael M. and Schmidt-Soltau, Kai, ‘The End of Forcible Displacement? Conservation Must Not Impoverish People’ (2003) 12 Policy Matters 44.Google Scholar
Chamberlain, Lisa, ‘Beyond Litigation: The Need for Creativity in Working to Realise Environmental Rights’ (2017) 13:1 Law, Environment and Development Journal 112.Google Scholar
Chandler, David and Reid, Julian, Becoming Indigenous: Governing Imaginaries in the Anthropocene (Rowman & Littlefield, 2019).Google Scholar
Chang, Felix B. and Rucker-Chang, Sunnie T., Roma Rights and Civil Rights: A Transatlantic Comparison (Cambridge University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Chapron, Guillaume et al., ‘Bolster Legal Boundaries to Stay within Planetary Boundaries’ (2017) 1 Nature Ecology & Evolution 1.Google Scholar
Churchill, Robin, ‘Environmental Rights in Existing Human Rights Treaties’ in Boyle, Alan and Anderson, Michael R. (eds), Human Rights Approaches to Environmental Protection (Oxford University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Ciocchini, Pablo and Khoury, Stefanie, ‘A Gramscian Approach to Studying the Judicial Decision-Making Process’ (2018) 26:1 Critical Criminology 7590.Google Scholar
Cittadino, Federica, Incorporating Indigenous Rights in the International Regime on Biodiversity Protection: Access, Benefit-sharing and Conservation in Indigenous Lands (Brill, 2019).Google Scholar
Claridge, Lucy, ‘Litigation as a Tool for Community Empowerment: The Case of Kenya’s Ogiek’ (2018) 1 Erasmus Law Review 5766.Google Scholar
Clark, Nigel and Szerszynski, Bronislaw, Planetary Social Thought: The Anthropocene Challenge to the Social Sciences (Polity, 2020).Google Scholar
Crawford, James and Nevill, Penelope, ‘Relations between International Courts and Tribunals: The “Regime Problem”’ in Young, Margaret A. (ed), Regime Interaction in International Law: Facing Fragmentation (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 235260.Google Scholar
Collins, Lynda, ‘Judging the Anthropocene: Transformative Adjudication in the Anthropocene Epoch’ in Kotzé, Louis J. (ed), Environmental Law and Governance for the Anthropocene (Hart Publishing, 2017), 309328.Google Scholar
Conklin, Beth, ‘Body Paint, Feathers, and VCRs: Aesthetics in Authenticity in Amazonian Activism’ (1997) 24:4 American Ethnologist 711737.Google Scholar
Coole, Diana and Frost, Samantha, ‘Introducing the New Materialisms’ in Coole, Diana and Frost, Samantha (eds), New Materialisms: Ontology, Agency, and Politics (Duke University Press, 2010), 145.Google Scholar
Corntassel, Jeff, ‘Towards Sustainable Self-Determination: Rethinking the Contemporary Indigenous Rights Discourse’ (2008) 33 Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cotula, Lorenzo, Human Rights, Natural Resource, and Investment Law in a Globalised World: Shades of Grey in the Shadow of the Law (Routledge, 2012).Google Scholar
Cover, Robert M., ‘Violence and the Word’ (1986) 95 Yale Law Journal 1601.Google Scholar
Cox, Robert W., ‘The Way Ahead: Toward a New Ontology of World Order’ in Wyn Jones, Richard (ed), Critical Theory and World Politics (Boulder, 2001).Google Scholar
Cox, Robert W., ‘Gramsci, Hegemony and International Relations: An Essay in Method’ in Gill, Stephen (ed), Gramsci, Historical Materialism and International Relations (Cambridge University Press, 1993), 4966.Google Scholar
Cox, Robert W., Production, Power and World Order: Social Forces in the Making of History (Columbia University Press, 1987)Google Scholar
Coyle, Sean, ‘Property Rights, Environmental Justice and Worldly Order – Lessons from Natural Law’ in Grear, Anna and Kotzé, Louis J. (eds), Research Handbook on Human Rights and the Environment (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015), 102120.Google Scholar
Cronon, William (ed), Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature (Paperback, 1996).Google Scholar
Cronon, William (ed), ‘The Trouble with Wilderness: Or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature’ (1996) 1:1 Environmental History 728.Google Scholar
Crow, Kevin, ‘A Taxonomy of Proportionality in International Courts’ (2017) iCourts Working Paper Series No. 107.Google Scholar
Crutzen, Paul J. and Stoermer, Eugene F., ‘The “Anthropocene”’ (2000) 41 Global Change Newsletter 1718.Google Scholar
Cullen, Helen et al., Experts, Networks, Advocacy and Mediation (Cambridge University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Cullinan, Cormac, Wild Law: A Manifesto for Earth Justice (2nd edn, Green Books, 2003).Google Scholar
Cusato, Eliana, The Ecology of War and Peace: Marginalising Slow and Structural Violence in International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Daly, Erin and May, James R., ‘Indivisibility of Human and Environmental Rights’ in Michael, Faure (ed), Elgar Encyclopedia of Environmental Law (Edward Elgar, 2019), 171182.Google Scholar
d’Aspremont, Jean, ‘Martti Koskenniemi, the Mainstream, and Self-Reflectivity’ (2016) 29 Leiden Journal of International Law 625.Google Scholar
d’Aspremont, Jean, ‘Wording in International Law’ (2012) 25 Leiden Journal of International Law 575.Google Scholar
d’Aspremont, Jean and Mbengue, Makane M., ‘Strategies of Engagement with Scientific Fact-Finding in International Adjudication’ (2014) 5 Journal of International Dispute Settlement 240272.Google Scholar
Dąbrowska-Kłosińska, Patrycja, ‘Risk, Precaution and Scientific Complexity before the Court of Justice of the European Union’ in Gruszczynski, Lukasz and Werner, Wouter (eds), Deference in International Courts and Tribunals: Standard of Review and Margin of Appreciation (Oxford University Press, 2014), 192208.Google Scholar
Das, Onitas, ‘Natural Resources, Conflict and Investment: Conflict Minerals in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Challenges for Sustainable Investments’, and Abdullah Al Faruque, ‘Sustainable Mining, Human Rights and Foreign Investment: Nexus and Challenges’ in Shawkat, Alam et al. (eds), International Natural Resources Law, Investment and Sustainability (Routledge, 2018).Google Scholar
Davies, Margaret, EcoLaw: Legality, Life, and the Normativity of Nature (Routledge, 2022).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davies, Margaret, Law Unlimited (Routledge, 2017).Google Scholar
Davis, Heather and Todd, Zoe, ‘On the Importance of a Date, or, Decolonizing the Anthropocene’ (2017) 16:4 An International Journal for Critical Geographies 761.Google Scholar
DeLoughrey, Elizabeth and Handley, George, Postcolonial Ecologies: Literatures of the Environment (Oxford University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
De Lucia, Vito, ‘A Critical Interrogation of the Relation between the Ecosystem Approach and Ecosystem Services’ (2018) 27:2 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 104114.Google Scholar
De Lucia, Vito, ‘Beyond Anthropocentrism and Ecocentrism: A Biopolitical Reading of Environmental Law’ (2017) 8:2 Journal of Environmental Law 181202.Google Scholar
De Lucia, Vito, ‘Competing Narratives and Complex Genealogies: The Ecosystem Approach in International Environmental Law’ (2015) 27:1 Journal of Environmental Law 91117.Google Scholar
de Sadeleer, Nicolas, ‘Enforcing EUCHR Principles and Fundamental Rights in Environmental Cases’ (2012) 81 Nordic Journal of International Law 3974.Google Scholar
de Wet, Erika and Vidmar, Jure, ‘Conflicts between International Paradigms: Hierarchy versus Systemic Integration’ (2013) 2 Global Constitutionalism 196.Google Scholar
Dehm, Julia, Reconsidering REDD+: Authority, Power and Law in the Green Economy (Cambridge University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Dejeant-Pons, Maguelonne and Pallemaerts, Marc (eds), Human Rights and the Environment, Compendium of Instruments and Other International Texts on Individual and Collective Rights Relating to the Environment in the International and European Framework (Strasbourg: Council of Europe, 2002).Google Scholar
Denevan, William M., ‘The Pristine Myth: Landscape of the Americas in 1492’ (1992) 82 Annals of the Association of American Geographers 3.Google Scholar
Demos, Thomas J., Decolonizing Nature: Contemporary Art and the Politics of Ecology (Sternberg Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Desai, Bharat H. and Sidhu, Balraj K., ‘International Courts and Tribunals – The New Environmental Sentinels in International Law’ (2020) 50 Environmental Policy and Law 17.Google Scholar
Desmet, Ellen, Indigenous Rights Entwined with Nature Conservation (Intersentia, 2011).Google Scholar
Dobrushi, Andi and Alexandridis, Theodoros, ‘International Housing Rights and Domestic Prejudice: The Case of Roma and Travellers’ in Malcolm, Langford, César, Rodríguez-Garavito and Julieta, Rossi (eds), Social Rights Judgments and the Politics of Compliance: Making It Stick (Cambridge University Press, 2017), 436472.Google Scholar
Dolidze, Anna, ‘Making International Property Law: The Role of Amici Curiae in International Judicial Decision-Making’ (2012) 40:1 Syracuse Journal of International Law and Commerce 119154.Google Scholar
Dommen, Caroline, ‘Claiming Environmental Rights: Some Possibilities Offered by The United Nations’ Human Rights Mechanisms’ (1998) 11 Georgetown International Environmental Law Review 3.Google Scholar
Doolittle, Amity A., ‘Fortress Conservation’ in Paul, Robbins (ed), Encyclopedia of Environment and Society (Sage, 2007), 704705.Google Scholar
dos Reis, Filipe and Kessler, Oliver, ‘Legitimacy’ in d’Aspremont, Jean and Singh, Sahib (eds), Concepts for International Law: Contributions to Disciplinary Thought (Edward Elgar, 2019), 650661.Google Scholar
Douglass, Bruce, ‘The Common Good and the Public Interest’ (1980) 8:1 Political Theory 103–117.Google Scholar
Dowie, Mark, Conservation Refugees: The Hundred-Year Conflict between Global Conservation and Native Peoples (MIT Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Drichel, Simone (ed), Relationality (Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
Dudley, Nigel and Stolton, Sue, Leaving Space for Nature: The Critical Role of Area-Based Conservation (Routledge, 2020).Google Scholar
Dupuy, Pierre-Marie and Viñuales, Jorge E., ‘Emergence and Development’ in International Environmental Law (Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Dupuy, Pierre-Marie, ‘The Philosophy of the Rio Declaration’ in Viñuales, Jorge E. (ed), The Rio Declaration on Environment and Development: A Commentary (Oxford University Press, 2015), 6572.Google Scholar
Dupuy, Pierre-Marie, ‘International Environmental Law: Looking at the Past to Shape the Future’ in Dupuy, Pierre-Marie and Viñuales, Jorge E. (eds), Harnessing Foreign Investment to Promote Environmental Protection: Incentives and Safeguards (Cambridge University Press 2013), 923.Google Scholar
Dupuy, Pierre-Marie, ‘The Danger of Fragmentation or Unification of the International Legal System and the International Court of Justice’ (1998) 31:4 NYU Journal of International Law and Politics 791808.Google Scholar
Eckel, Jan and Moyn, Samuel (eds), The Breakthrough: Human Rights in the 1970s (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Ehrlich, Paul and Ehrlich, Anne, The Population Bomb (Ballantine Books, 1968).Google Scholar
Ellis, Jaye, ‘Scientific Expertise and Transnational Standards: Authority, Legitimacy, Validity’ (2017) 8:2 Transnational Legal Theory 181–201.Google Scholar
Emeseh, Engobo, ‘Human Rights Dimensions of Contemporary Environmental Protection’ in Odello, Marco and Cavandoli, Sofia (eds), Emerging Areas of Human Rights in the 21st Century: The Role of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Routledge, 2011), 6686.Google Scholar
Engle Merry, Sally, ‘Transnational Human Rights and Local Activism: Mapping the Middle’ (2006) 108:1 American Anthropologist 3851.Google Scholar
Engle Merry, Sally, ‘Courts as Performances: Domestic Violence Hearings in Hawai’i Family Court’ in Lazarus-Black, Mindie and Hirsch, Susan F. (eds), Contested States: Law, Hegemony and Resistance (Routledge, 1994).Google Scholar
Etermire, Uzuazo, ‘Insights on the UNEP Bali Guidelines and the Development of Environmental Democratic Rights’ (2016) 23 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 393.Google Scholar
Fakhri, Michael, ‘Markets, Sovereignty, and Racialization’ (2022) 25 Journal of International Economic Law 117.Google Scholar
Feichtner, Isabel and Ranganathan, Surabhi (eds), ‘Symposium: International Law and Economic Exploitation in the Global Commons’ (2019) 30 European Journal of International Law 541.Google Scholar
Feichtner, Isabel and Ranganathan, Surabhi (eds), ‘International Law and Economic Exploitation in the Global Commons: Introduction’ (2019) 30:2 European Journal of International Law 541546.Google Scholar
Femia, Joseph V., ‘The Concept of Hegemony’ in Femia, Joseph V., Gramsci’s Political Thought: Hegemony, Consciousness, and the Revolutionary Process (Oxford University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Fernández Fernández, Edgar and Malwé, Claire, ‘The Emergence of the “Planetary Boundaries” Concept in International Environmental Law: A Proposal for a Framework Convention’ (2018) 28:1 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 48.Google Scholar
Fischer Kuh, Katrina, ‘An Unnatural Divide: How Law Obscures Individual Environmental Harms’ in Hirokawa, Keith H. (ed), Environmental Law and Contrasting Ideas of Nature: A Constructivist Approach (Cambridge University Press, 2014), 2846.Google Scholar
Fischer-Lescano, Andreas and Teubner, Gunther, ‘Regime Collisions: The Vain Search for Legal Unity in the Fragmentation of International Law’ (2004) 25 Michigan Journal of International Law 999.Google Scholar
Fitzmaurice, Malgosia, ‘Indigenous Peoples and Intergenerational Equity as an Emerging Aspect of Ethno-Cultural Diversity in International Law’ in Pentassuglia, Gaetano (ed), Ethno-Cultural Diversity and Human Rights: Challenges and Critiques (Brill Nijhoff, 2018), 188222.Google Scholar
Fitzmaurice, Malgosia, Whaling and International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Forlati, Serena, Mbengue, Makane Moïse and McGarry, Brian (eds), The Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros Judgment and Its Contribution to the Development of International Law (Brill, 2020).Google Scholar
Foster, Caroline E., Science and the Precautionary Principle in International Courts and Tribunals: Expert Evidence, Burden of Proof and Finality (Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Francioni, Francesco (ed), ‘Realism, Utopia and the Future of International Environmental Law’ (2012) EUI Working Papers Law 2012/11, at http://cadmus.eui.eu/handle/1814/21755.Google Scholar
Francioni, Francesco (ed), ‘International Human Rights in the Environmental Horizon’ (2010) 21 European Journal of International Law 41.Google Scholar
Francioni, Francesco (ed), Environment, Human Rights and International Trade (Hart Publishing, 2001).Google Scholar
Fraser, Nancy, Scales of Justice: Reimagining Political Space in a Globalizing World (Columbia University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
French, Duncan and Kotzé, Louis J. (eds), Research Handbook on Law, Governance and Planetary Boundaries (Edward Elgar, 2021).Google Scholar
Gandhi, Indira, ‘Address of Shrimati Indira Gandhi, Prime Minister of India: The Unfinished Revolution’, Part V of ‘A Special Report: What Happened at Stockholm’ (1972) 28:7 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.Google Scholar
Gardoni, Paolo et al. (eds), Risk Analysis of Natural Hazards: Interdisciplinary Challenges and Integrated Solutions (Springer, 2016).Google Scholar
Garver, Geoffrey, Ecological Law and the Planetary Crisis: A Legal Guide for Harmony on Earth (Routledge, 2020).Google Scholar
Gearty, Conor, ‘Do Human Rights Help or Hinder Environmental Protection?’ (2010) 1:1 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 722.Google Scholar
Geertz, Clifford, ‘Local Knowledge: Fact and Law in Comparative Perspective’ in Geertz, Clifford (ed), Local Knowledge: Further Essays in Interpretive Anthropology (Basic Books, 1983), 167234.Google Scholar
Geisler, Charles C., Your Park, My Poverty: The Growth of Greenlining in Africa (Mimeo, 2001).Google Scholar
Geisler, Charles C., ‘Endangered Humans: How Global Land Conservation Efforts Are Creating a Growing Class of Invisible Refugees’ (2001) Foreign Policy.Google Scholar
Gellers, Joshua C., Rights for Robots: Artificial Intelligence, Animal and Environmental Law (Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
George, Timothy S., Minamata: Pollution and the Struggle for Democracy in Postwar Japan (Harvard University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Gilbert, Jérémie, ‘Indigenous Peoples and Litigation: Strategies for Legal Empowerment’ (2020) 12:2 Journal of Human Rights Practice 301320.Google Scholar
Gilbert, Jérémie, Natural Resources, Human Rights and International Law: An Appraisal (Oxford University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Gilbert, Jérémie, ‘Litigating Indigenous Peoples’ Rights in Africa: Potentials, Challenges and Limitations’ (2017) 66:3 International and Comparative Law Quarterly 657686.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilbert, Jérémie, Indigenous Peoples’ Land Rights under International Law: From Victims to Actors (2nd edn, Brill Nijhoff, 2016).Google Scholar
Gilbert, Jérémie and Begbie-Clench, Ben, ‘“Mapping for Rights”: Indigenous Peoples, Litigation and Legal Empowerment’ (2018) 1 Erasmus Law Review 713.Google Scholar
Gill, Bikrum, ‘Beyond the Premise of Conquest: Indigenous and Black Earth-worlds in the Anthropocene Debates’ (2021) 18:6 Globalizations 912928.Google Scholar
Glover, James M., ‘Soul of the Wilderness: Can We Stop Trying to Control Nature?’ (2000) 6:1 International Journal of Wilderness 4.Google Scholar
Golder, Ben, ‘Beyond Redemption? Problematising the Critique of Human Rights in Contemporary International Legal Thought’ (2014) 2:1 London Review of International Law 77114.Google Scholar
Gonzalez, Carmen G., ‘Bridging the North-South Divide: International Environmental Law in the Anthropocene’ (2015) 32 Pace Environmental Law Review 407.Google Scholar
Gramsci, Antonio, Selections from the Prison Notebooks (ed and trans Q. Hoare and G. Nowell Smith, Lawrence and Wishart, 1971).Google Scholar
Grant, Evadne, ‘International Human Rights Courts and Environmental Human Rights: Re-Imagining Adjudicative Paradigms’ (2015) 6:2 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 156176.Google Scholar
Grant, Evadne, Kotzé, Louis J. and Morrow, Karen, ‘Human Rights and the Environment: In Search of a New Relationship: Synergies and Common Themes’ (2013) 3 Oñati Socio-Legal Series 5.Google Scholar
Grear, Anna, ‘It’s Wrongheaded to Protect Nature with Human-Style Rights’ (19 March 2019, Aeon Magazine), at https://aeon.co/ideas/its-wrongheaded-to-protect-nature-with-human-style-rights.Google Scholar
Grear, Anna, ‘Deconstructing Anthropos: A Critical Legal Reflection on “Anthropocentric” Law and Anthropocene Humanity’ (2015) 26 Law Critique 225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grear, Anna, Boulot, Emille, Sterlin, Joshua and Vargas-Roncancio, Iván Darío (eds), ‘Posthuman Legalities: New Materialism and Law Beyond the Human’ (2021) 12:1 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment.Google Scholar
Grove, Kevin and Chandler, David, ‘Introduction: Resilience and the Anthropocene: The Stakes of “Renaturalising” Politics’ (2017) 5:2 Resilience 7991.Google Scholar
Grove, Richard H., Green Imperialism. Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism, 1600–1860 (Cambridge University Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Grusin, Richard (ed), Anthropocene Feminism (University of Minnesota Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Hajjar Leib, Linda, Human Rights and the Environment: Philosophical, Theoretical and Legal Perspectives (Martinus Nijhoff, 2011).Google Scholar
Hale, Charles R., ‘Activist Research v. Cultural Critique: Indigenous Land Rights and the Contradictions of Politically Engaged Anthropology’ (2006) 21:1 Cultural Anthropology 196120.Google Scholar
Hale, Charles R., ‘Neoliberal Multiculturalism: The Remaking of Cultural Rights and Racial Dominance in Central America’ (2005) 28:1 Political and Legal Anthropology Review 1028.Google Scholar
Halme-Tuomisaari, Miia and Slotte, Pamela (eds), Revisiting the Origins of Human Rights (Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Hamilton, Clive, Bonneuil, Christophe and Gemenne, François (eds), The Anthropocene and the Global Environmental Crisis: Rethinking Modernity in a New Epoch (Routledge, 2015).Google Scholar
Hancock, Jan, Environmental Human Rights: Power, Ethics and Law (Routledge, 2003).Google Scholar
Haraway, Donna J., Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene (Duke University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Haraway, Donna J., ‘Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Plantationocene, Chthulucene: Making Kin’ (2015) 6 Environmental Humanities 159165.Google Scholar
Hardin, Garrett, ‘The Tragedy of the Commons’ (1968) 162 Science 1243.Google Scholar
Hauser, Gerard A., ‘The Moral Vernacular of Human Rights Discourse’ (2008) 41 Philosophy and Rhetoric 4.Google Scholar
Hayward, Tim, ‘International Political Theory and the Global Environment: Some Critical Questions for Liberal Cosmopolitans’ (2009) 40:2 Journal of Social Philosophy 276295.Google Scholar
Hayward, Tim, ‘Human Rights versus Emissions Rights: Climate Justice and the Equitable Distribution of Ecological Space’ (2007) 21 Ethics and International Affairs 431.Google Scholar
Hayward, Tim, Political Theory and Ecological Values (Polity Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Hendry, Jennifer and Tatum, Melissa L., ‘Human Rights, Indigenous Peoples, and the Pursuit of Justice’ (2016) 34 Yale Law & Policy Review 351.Google Scholar
Hey, Ellen, ‘The Interaction between Human Rights and the Environment in the European “Aarhus Space”’ in Grear, Anna and Kotzé, Louis J. (eds), Research Handbook on Human Rights and the Environment (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015), 353376.Google Scholar
Hicks, Scott, ‘W.E.B. Du Bois, Booker T. Washington, and Richard Wright: Toward an Ecocriticism of Color’ (2006) 29:1 Callaloo 202222.Google Scholar
Hilson, Chris, ‘The Role of Narrative in Environmental Law: The Nature of Tales and Tales of Nature’ (2021) Journal of Environmental Law 124.Google Scholar
Hirokawa, Keith H. (ed), Environmental Law and Contrasting Ideas of Nature: A Constructivist Approach (Cambridge University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Hirschl, Ran, ‘The Judicialization of Politics’ in Goodin, Robert, E. (ed), The Oxford Handbook of Political Science (Oxford University Press, 2011), 253274.Google Scholar
Hobbs, Richard J. et al., ‘Managing the Whole Landscape: Historical, Hybrid, and Novel Ecosystems’ (2014) 12:10 Frontiers in Ecology and Environment 557564.Google Scholar
Hughes, Lotte, Moving the Maasai: A Colonial Misadventure (Palgrave Macmillan, 2006).Google Scholar
Humphreys, Stephen and Otomo, Yoriko, ‘Theorising International Environmental Law’ in Hoffmann, Florian and Orford, Anne (eds), The Oxford Handbook of the Theory of International Law (Oxford University Press, 2014), 797819.Google Scholar
Hunt, Lynn, Inventing Human Rights: A History (W. W. Norton and Company Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Ickes, Harold L., ‘War and Our Vanishing Resources’ (1945) 140 American Magazine 6.Google Scholar
Iovino, Serenella and Oppermann, Serpil, ‘Introduction’ in Iovino, Serenella and Oppermann, Serpil (eds), Environmental Humanities: Voices from the Anthropocene (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016), 121.Google Scholar
Iriarte, José et al., ‘Pre-Columbian Earth-Builders Settled Along the Entire Southern Rim of the Amazon’ (2018) Nature Communications 9.Google Scholar
Jackson, Zakiyyah Iman, Becoming Human: Matter and Meaning in an Antiblack World (New York University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Jacobs, Francis, ‘The Role of the European Court of Justice in the Protection of the Environment’ (2006) 18:2 Journal of Environmental Law 185205.Google Scholar
Jaque, Andrés et al. (eds), More-than-Human (Het Nieuwe Instituut, 2020).Google Scholar
Jasanoff, Sheila, ‘A World of Experts: Science and Global Environmental Constitutionalism’ (2013) 40 Environmental Affairs 439.Google Scholar
Jasanoff, Sheila, ‘What Judges Should Know about the Sociology of Science’ in Jasanoff, Sheila (ed), Science and Public Reason (Routledge, 2012).Google Scholar
Jasanoff, Sheila, ‘Heaven and Earth: The Politics of Environmental Images’ in Jasanoff, Sheila and Martello, Marybeth (eds), Earthly Politics: Local and Global in Environmental Governance (MIT Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Jasanoff, Sheila, ‘The Idiom of Co-production’ in Jasanoff, Sheila (ed), States of Knowledge: The Co-production of Science and Social Order (Routledge, 2004).Google Scholar
Johnson, Chris, Ryder, Andrew and Willers, Marc, ‘Gypsies and Travellers in the United Kingdom and Security of Tenure’ (2010) 1 Roma Rights Quarterly 4548.Google Scholar
Johnston, Barbara R., ‘Human Rights and the Environment’ (1995) 23 Human Ecology 111.Google Scholar
Kauffman, Craig M. and Martin, Pamela L., The Politics of Rights of Nature: Strategies for Building a More Sustainable Future (MIT Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Kaza, Stephanie and Kraft, Kenneth (eds), Dharma Rain: Sources of Buddhist Environmentalism (Shambhala, 2000).Google Scholar
Kennedy, David W., A World of Struggle: How Power, Law, and Expertise Shape Global Political Economy (Princeton University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Kennedy, David W., ‘Challenging Expert Rule: The Politics of Global Governance’ (2005) 27 Sydney Law Review 528.Google Scholar
Kennedy, Duncan, ‘The Critique of Rights in Critical Legal Studies’ in Brown, Wendy and Halley, Janet (eds), Left Legalism/Left Critique (Duke University Press, 2012), 178228Google Scholar
Kennedy, Duncan, A Critique of Adjudication: Fin de Siècle (Harvard University Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Kennedy, Duncan, ‘Antonio Gramsci and the Legal System’ (1982) 6:1 ALSA Forum 3237.Google Scholar
Kim, Rakhyun E. and Bosselmann, Klaus, ‘International Environmental Law in the Anthropocene: Towards a Purposive System of Multilateral Environmental Management’ (2013) 2 Transnational Environmental Law 285309.Google Scholar
Kingsbury, Benedict, ‘Indigenous Peoples, Rights and the Environment’ in Anton, Donald K. and Shelton, Dinah (eds), Environmental Protection and Human Rights (Cambridge University Press, 2011), 545665.Google Scholar
Kingsbury, Benedict, ‘Reconciling Five Competing Conceptual Structures of Indigenous Peoples’ Claims in International and Comparative Law’ in Philip, Alston (ed), Peoples’ Rights (Oxford University Press, 2008), 69110.Google Scholar
Kingsbury, Benedict, ‘The International Legal Order’ in Kane, Peter and Tushnet, Mark (eds), Oxford Handbook of Legal Studies (Oxford University Press, 2003), 271297.Google Scholar
Kirsch, Stuart, Engaged Anthropology: Politics beyond the Text (University of California Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Kiwanuka, Richard N., ‘The Meaning of “People” in the African Charter of Human and Peoples’ Rights’ (1988) 82 American Journal of International Law.Google Scholar
Klabbers, Jan, ‘The Virtues of Expertise’ in Ambrus, Monika et al. (eds), The Role of ‘Experts’ in International and European Decision-Making Processes: Advisors, Decision Makers or Irrelevant Actors? (Cambridge University Press, 2014), 82102.Google Scholar
Knox, John H., ‘Constructing the Human Right to a Healthy Environment’ (2020) 16 Annual Review of Law and Social Science 7995.Google Scholar
Knox, John H., ‘The Global Pact for the Environment: At the Crossroads of Human Rights and the Environment’ (2019) 28 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 40.Google Scholar
Knox, John H., ‘Human Rights Principles and Climate Change’ in Gray, Kevin R., Tarasofsky, Richard and Carlarne, Cinnamon (eds), The Oxford Handbook of International Climate Change Law (Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Knox, John H., ‘Linking Human Rights and Climate Change at the United Nations’ (2009) 33 Harvard Environmental Law Review 477.Google Scholar
Knox, John H., ‘The Judicial Resolution of Conflicts between Trade and the Environment’ (2004) 28 Harvard Environmental Law Review 1.Google Scholar
Knox, John H. and Pejan, Ramin (eds), The Human Right to a Healthy Environment (Cambridge University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Knox, Robert, ‘Hegemony’ in d’Aspremont, Jean and Singh, Sahib (eds), Concepts for International Law: Contributions to Disciplinary Thought (Edward Elgar, 2019), 328360.Google Scholar
Knox, Robert, ‘Strategy and Tactics’ (2010) 21 Finnish Yearbook of International Law 193230.Google Scholar
Kohler, Pia M., Science Advice and Global Environmental Governance: Expert Institutions and the Implementation of International Environmental Treaties (Anthem Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Koivurova, Timo, ‘Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights Regarding Indigenous Peoples: Retrospects and Prospects’ (2011) 18 International Journal on Minority and Groups Rights 137.Google Scholar
Kolb, Robert, Interprétation et création du droit international: esquisses d'une herméneutique juridique moderne pour le droit international public (Bruylant, 2006).Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘Sovereignty, Property, and the Locus of Power’ (2018), JHIBLOG: the blog of the Journal of the History of Ideas, at https://jhiblog.org/2018/10/17/sovereignty-property-and-the-locus-of-power-anne-schult-interviews-martti-koskenniemi-on-the-conceptual-history-of-international-law/.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘What Is International Law For?’ in Evans, Malcolm D. (ed), International Law (4th edn, Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘Hegemonic Regimes’ in Young, Margaret A. (ed), Regime Interaction in International Law: Facing Fragmentation (Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘The Effects of Rights on Political Culture’ in Koskenniemi, Martti (ed), The Politics of International Law (Hart Publishing, 2011).Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘Human Rights Mainstreaming as a Strategy for Institutional Power’ (2010) 1 Humanity, an International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism and Development 4758.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘The Fate of Public International Law: Between Techniques and Politics’ (2007) 70:1 Modern Law Review 130.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, From Apology to Utopia: The Structure of International Legal Argument (Cambridge University Press, reissue with a new epilogue, 2005).Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘International Law and Hegemony: A Reconfiguration’ (2004) 17:2 Cambridge Review of International Affairs 197218.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘What Should International Lawyers Learn from Karl Marx?’ (2004) 17:2 Leiden Journal of International Law.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘Study on the Function and Scope of the lex specialis Rule and the Question of Self-contained Regimes: Preliminary Report’, ILC(LVI)/SG/FIL/CRD.1 and Add1 (United Nations, 2004).Google Scholar
Kothari, Ashish et al. (eds), ‘Recognising and Supporting Territories and Areas Conserved by Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities: Global Overview and National Case Studies’, Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, ICCA Consortium, Kalpavriksh, and Natural Justice, Montreal, Canada. Technical Series No. 64 (2012), at www.cbd.int/doc/publications/cbd-ts-64-en.pdf.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J., ‘Earth System Law for the Anthropocene: Rethinking Environmental Law Alongside the Earth System Metaphor’ (2020) 11 Transnational Legal Theory 75.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J., ‘Earth System Law for the Anthropocene’ (2019) 11:23 Sustainability 6796.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J., ‘Human Rights and the Environment in the Anthropocene’ (2014) The Anthropocene Review 1.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J., ‘Rethinking Global Environmental Law and Governance in the Anthropocene’ (2014) 32 Journal of Energy and Natural Resources Law 121.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J. and Kim, Rakhyun E., ‘Exploring the Analytical, Normative and Transformative Dimensions of Earth System Law’ (2021) Environmental Policy and Law 1.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J. and Kim, Rakhyun E., ‘Earth System Law: The Juridical Dimensions of Earth System Governance’ (2019) Earth System Governance 100003.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J. and French, Duncan, ‘A Critique of the Global Pact for the Environment: A Stillborn Initiative or the Foundation for Lex Anthropocenae?’ (2018) 18:6 International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 811838.Google Scholar
Kravchenko, Svitlana and Bonine, John, Human Rights and the Environment: Cases, Law and Policy (Carolina Academic Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Kurki, Visa A. J. and Pietrzykowski, Tomasz (eds), Legal Personhood: Animals, Artificial Intelligence and the Unborn (Springer, 2017).Google Scholar
Lakoff, George, ‘Why It Matters How We Frame the Environment’ (2010) 4:1 Environmental Communication 70.Google Scholar
Latour, Bruno, ‘Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam? From Matters of Facts to Matters of Concern’ (2004) Critical Inquiry 30.Google Scholar
Lehtonen, Markku, ‘The Environmental-Social Interface of Sustainable Development: Capabilities, Social Capital, Institutions’ (2004) 49 Ecological Economics 199.Google Scholar
Lethabo King, Tiffany et al. (eds), Otherwise Worlds: Against Settler Colonialism and Anti-Blackness (Duke University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Leiter, Brian, ‘Legal Formalism and Legal Realism: What Is the Issue?’ (2010) 16 Legal Theory 111133.Google Scholar
Lenzerini, Federico and Vrdoljak, Ana Filipa (eds), International Law for Common Goods: Normative Perspectives on Human Rights, Culture and Nature (Hart Publishing, 2014).Google Scholar
Letsas, George, ‘Strasbourg’s Interpretative Ethic: Lessons for the International Lawyer’ (2010) 21:3 European Journal of International Law 509541.Google Scholar
Lewis, Simon and Maslin, Mark, The Human Planet: How We Created the Anthropocene (Yale University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Lin, Albert C., ‘Myths of Environmental Law’ (2015) Utah Law Review 4591.Google Scholar
Lippmann, Walter, The Public Philosophy (Hamish Hamilton, 1955).Google Scholar
Litowitz, Douglas, ‘Gramsci, Hegemony, and the Law’ (2000) BYU Law Review 515.Google Scholar
Liu, H.-W., ‘Harmonizing the Internal Market, or Public Health? – Revisiting Case C-491/01 (British American Tobacco) and Case C-380/03 (Tobacco advertising II)’ (2009) Columbia Journal of European Law 15.Google Scholar
Lixinski, Lucas, ‘Case of the Kaliña and Lokono Peoples v. Suriname’ (2017) 111:1 American Journal of International Law 147154.Google Scholar
Loucaides, Loukis G., ‘Reflections of a Former European Court of Human Rights Judge on His Experiences as a Judge’ (2010) 1 Roma Rights Quarterly 6169.Google Scholar
Lowe, Vaughan, ‘The Politics of Law-Making: Are the Method and Character of Norm Creation Changing?’ in Byers, Michael (ed), The Role of Law in International Politics: Essays in International Relations and International Law (Oxford University Press, 2000), 207226.Google Scholar
Lynch, Gabrielle, ‘Becoming Indigenous in the Pursuit of Justice: The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the Endorois’ (2012) 111:442 African Affairs 2445.Google Scholar
Lynch, Michael, ‘Circumscribing Expertise: Membership Categories in Courtroom Testimonies’ in Jasanoff, Sheila (ed), States of Knowledge: The Co-production of Science and the Social Order (Routledge, 2004), 161180.Google Scholar
Macekura, Stephen J., Of Limits and Growth: The Rise of Global Sustainable Development in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Mackay, Fergus, ‘The Case of the Kaliña and Lokono Peoples v. Suriname: Convergence, Divergence and Mutual Reinforcement’ (2018) 1 Erasmus Law Review 3142.Google Scholar
MacLachlan, Campbell, ‘The Principle of Systemic Integration and Article 31(3)(c) of the Vienna Convention’ (2005) 54 International and Comparative Law Quarterly 279.Google Scholar
Maffi, Luisa and Woodley, Ellen, Biocultural Diversity Conservation: A Global Sourcebook (Earthscan, 2010).Google Scholar
Malm, Andreas and Hornborg, Alf, ‘The Geology of Mankind? A Critique of the Anthropocene Narrative’ (2014) 1 The Anthropocene Review 1.Google Scholar
Malone, Linda A. and Pasternack, Scott, ‘Exercising Environmental Human Rights and Remedies in the United Nations System’ (2002–2003) 27 William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review 365.Google Scholar
Maloney, Michelle and Burdon, Peter (eds), Wild Law – In Practice (Routledge, 2014).Google Scholar
Marín Durán, Gracia and Morgera, Elisa, ‘Commentary on Article 37 of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights – Environmental Protection’ (2013) Europa Working Paper No. 2013/2.Google Scholar
Martin, Mathilde and Islar, Mine, ‘The “End of the World” vs. the “End of the Month”: Understanding Social Resistance to Sustainability Transition Agendas, A Lesson from the Yellow Vests in France’ (2021) 16 Sustainability Science 601614.Google Scholar
Martinez, Dennis, ‘Indigenous Peoples and the Western Idea of Nature’ (2003) 21 Ecological Restoration 4.Google Scholar
Matthews, Daniel, Earthbound: The Aesthetics of Sovereignty in the Anthropocene (Edinburgh University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Matthews, Daniel, ‘Law and Aesthetics in the Anthropocene: From the Rights of Nature to the Aesthesis of Obligations’ (2019) Law, Culture and the Humanities 1.Google Scholar
Matz-Lück, Nele, ‘Promoting the Unity of International Law: Standard-Setting by International Tribunals’ in König, Doris et al. (eds), International Law Today: New Challenges and the Need for Reform? (Springer, 2008), 99121.Google Scholar
Matz-Lück, Nele, ‘Harmonization, Systemic Integration, and Mutual Supportiveness as Conflict-Solution Techniques’ (2006) 17 Finnish Yearbook of International Law 3953.Google Scholar
May, James R. and Daly, Erin (eds), Human Rights and the Environment: Legality, Indivisibility, Dignity and Geography (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2019).Google Scholar
McCrudden, Christopher, ‘Mainstreaming Human Rights’ in Harvey, Colin (ed), Human Rights in the Community: Rights as Agents for Change (Hart Publishing, 2005), 928.Google Scholar
McHarg, Aileen, ‘Reconciling Human Rights and the Public Interest: Conceptual Problems and Doctrinal Uncertainty in the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights’ (1999) 62 The Modern Law Review 5.Google Scholar
Meadows, Donella H. et al., The Limits to Growth (Universe Books 1972).Google Scholar
Medina, Laurie Kroshus, ‘The Production of Indigenous Land Rights: Judicial Decisions across National, Regional, and Global Scales’ (2016) 39 Political and Legal Anthropology Review 1.Google Scholar
Merchant, Carolyn, Reinventing Eden: The Fate of Nature in Western Culture (Routledge, 2004).Google Scholar
Merrills, John G., ‘Environmental Rights’ in Brunnée, Jutta, Bodansky, Daniel and Hey, Ellen (eds), The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law (Oxford University Press, 2007), 664680.Google Scholar
Michaels, David, ‘Manufactured Uncertainty: Contested Science and the Protection of the Public’s Health and Environment’ in Proctor, Robert N. and Schiebinger, Londa (eds), Agnotology: The Making and Unmaking of Ignorance (Stanford University Press, 2008), 90107.Google Scholar
Mickelson, Karin, ‘The Stockholm Conference and the Creation of the South-North Divide in International Environmental Law and Policy’ in Alam, Shawkat et al. (eds), International Environmental Law and the Global South (Cambridge University Press, 2015) 115117.Google Scholar
Miglietti, Sara, ‘Between Nature and Culture: The Integrated Ecology of Renaissance Climate Theories’ in Pauline, Goul and Phillip, John Usher (eds), Early Modern Écologies: Beyond English Ecocriticism (Amsterdam University Press, 2020) 137.Google Scholar
Mikhail, Alan, ‘Enlightenment Anthropocene’ (2016) 49:2 Eighteenth-Century Studies 211.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Audra and Chaudhury, Aadita, ‘Worlding beyond “the” “End” of “the World”: White Apocalyptic Visions and BIPOC Futurisms’ (2020) 34:3 International Relations 309.Google Scholar
Monani, Salma and Adamson, Joni (eds), Ecocriticism and Indigenous Studies: Conversations from Earth to Cosmos (Routledge, 2016).Google Scholar
Montini, Massimiliano, ‘The Rise of “Internal Environmental Conflicts” within the Green Economy’ (2015) 24 The Italian Yearbook of International Law 95.Google Scholar
Moore, Jason W. (ed), ‘The Capitalocene, Part I: On the Nature and Origins of Our Ecological Crisis’ (2017) 44 The Journal of Peasant Studies 3.Google Scholar
Moore, Jason W. (ed), Anthropocene or Capitalocene? Nature, History, and the Crisis of Capitalism (PM Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Morgan-Foster, Jason, ‘What Islamic Law Can Teach the International Human Rights Movement’ (2014) 8 Yale Human Rights and Development Journal 1.Google Scholar
Morgera, Elisa, ‘Under the Radar: Fair and Equitable Benefit-Sharing and the Human Rights of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities Related to Natural Resources’ (2019) The International Journal of Human Rights.Google Scholar
Morgera, Elisa, ‘The Need for an International Legal Concept of Fair and Equitable Benefit Sharing’ (2016) 27 European Journal of International Law 2.Google Scholar
Morgera, Elisa, ‘Corporate Accountability’ in Morgera, Elisa and Kulovesi, Kati (eds) Research Handbook on International Law and Natural Resources (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2016).Google Scholar
Morgera, Elisa, Corporate Accountability in International Environmental Law (Oxford University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Moyn, Samuel, Human Rights and the Uses of History (Verso, 2014).Google Scholar
Natarajan, Usha, ‘TWAIL and the Environment: The State of Nature, the Nature of the State, and the Arab Spring’ (2012) 14:1 Oregon Review of International Law 177.Google Scholar
Natarajan, Usha and Khoday, Kishan, ‘Environment’ in Jean, d’Aspremont and John, Haskell (eds), Tipping Points in International Law: Commitment and Critique (Cambridge University Press, 2021), 132–148.Google Scholar
Natarajan, Usha and Khoday, Kishan, ‘Locating Nature: Making and Unmaking International Law’ (2014) 27:3 Leiden Journal of International Law 573593.Google Scholar
Neumann, Roderick P., Imposing Wilderness: Struggles over Livelihood and Nature Preservation in Africa (University of California Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Nichols, Robert, Theft Is Property! Dispossession and Critical Theory (Duke University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Nicholson, Edward M., The Environmental Revolution: A Guide for the New Masters of the World (Hodder and Stoughton, 1970).Google Scholar
Nicholson, Matthew, ‘Psychoanalyzing International Law(yers)’ (2017) 18:3 German Law Journal 441510.Google Scholar
Nifosi-Sutton, Ingrid, The Protection of Vulnerable Groups under International Human Rights Law (Routledge, 2017).Google Scholar
Nollkaemper, André, ‘Framing Elephant Extinction’, 3 ESIL 6 (2014), at www.esil-sedi.eu/node/643.Google Scholar
Norman, Jana, Posthuman Legal Subjectivity: Reimagining the Human in the Anthropocene (Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
Nyhan, Emma, ‘International Law in Transit: The Concept of “Indigenous Peoples” and Its Transitions in International, National and Local Realms — the Example of the Bedouin in the Negev’ in August, Reinisch, Mary E., Footer and Christina, Binder (eds), International Law and … Select Proceedings of the European Society of International Law (Hart, 2016), 289308.Google Scholar
Nyhan, Emma, ‘Translating Global Indigeneity into the Bedouin Vernacular’ (2021) 12:3 Transnational Legal Theory 415441.Google Scholar
O’Gorman, Roderic, ‘The Case for Enshrining a Right to Environment within EU Law’ (2013) 19:3 European Public Law 583604.Google Scholar
Okely, Judith, The Traveller-Gypsies (Cambridge University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Otis, Ghislain and Laurent, Aurélie, ‘Indigenous Land Claims in Europe: The European Court of Human Rights and the Decolonization of Property’ (2013) 4:2 Arctic Review on Law and Politics 156180.Google Scholar
Pahuja, Sundhya, ‘Conserving the World’s Resources?’ in Crawford, James and Koskenniemi, Martti (eds), The Cambridge Companion to International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Pahuja, Sundhya, Decolonising International Law: Development, Economic Growth and the Politics of Universality (Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Pasqualucci, Jo M., ‘The Right to a Dignified Life (Vida Digna): The Integration of Economic and Social Rights with Civil and Political Rights in the Inter-American Human Rights System’ (2008) 31 Hastings International and Comparative Law Review 1.Google Scholar
Pauwelyn, Joost, Conflicts of Norms in Public International Law: How WTO Rules Relate to Other Rules of International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Pauwelyn, Joost and Michaels, Ralf, ‘Conflict of Norms or Conflict of Laws? Different Techniques in the Fragmentation of Public International Law’ (2012) 22 Duke Journal of International and Comparative Law.Google Scholar
Pederson, Ole, ‘An International Environmental Court and International Legalism’ (2012) 24 Journal of Environmental Law 547558.Google Scholar
Peel, Jacqueline, ‘Giving the Public a Voice in the Protection of the Global Environment: Avenues for Participation by NGOs in Dispute Resolution at the European Court of Justice and World Trade Organization’ (2001) 12 Colorado Journal of Environmental Law 47.Google Scholar
Pelloux, Robert, ‘Vrais et Faux Droits de l’Homme: Problèmes de Définition et de Classification’ (1981) Revue de Droit Public.Google Scholar
Pepper, Angie, ‘Adapting to Climate Change: What We Owe to Other Animals’ (2019) 36 Journal of Applied Philosophy 592.Google Scholar
Perlman, Cary R. (ed), Environmental Litigation: Law and Strategy (American Bar Association, 2009).Google Scholar
Peroni, Lourdes and Timmer, Alexandra, ‘Vulnerable Groups: The Promise of an Emerging Concept in European Human Rights Convention Law’ (2013) 11:4 International Journal of Constitutional Law 10561085.Google Scholar
Peters, Anne, ‘Compensatory Constitutionalism: The Function and Potential of Fundamental International Norms and Structures’ (2006) 19 Leiden Journal of International Law 579.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Response-Abilities of Care in More-than-Human Worlds’ (2021) 12:1 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 102124.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘“I Wish There Was a Treaty We Could Sign”: An Inquiry into the Making of the Global Pact for the Environment’ (2021) 28:2 Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 780.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Contested Indigeneity and Traditionality in Environmental Litigation: The Politics of Expertise in Regional Human Rights Courts’ (2021) 21:1 Human Rights Law Review 132156.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Is Climate Change a Human Rights Violation? Abandoning the Rights Ethos: Facing Climate Change as a Collective Duty’ in Hulme, Mike (ed), Contemporary Debates about Climate Change: A Student Primer (Routledge, 2019).Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘When Environmental Protection and Human Rights Collide: Four Heuristics of Conflict Resolution’ in Voigt, Christina (ed), International Judicial Practice on the Environment: Questions of Legitimacy (Cambridge University Press, 2019), 239261.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Rights and Expertise: Assessing the CJEU’s Managerial Approach to Conflict Adjudication’ in Baetens, Freya (ed), The Legitimacy of Unseen Actors in International Adjudication (Cambridge University Press, 2019), 297319.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Narcissus’ Reflection in the Lake: Untold Narratives in Environmental Law beyond the Anthropocentric Frame’ (2018) 30:2 Journal of Environmental Law, 235259.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘The Integration of Environmental Protection Considerations within the Human Rights Law Regime: Which Solutions Have Been Provided by Regional Human Rights Courts?’ (2015) 24 Italian Yearbook of International Law 191.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Conflicts between Environmental Protection and Human Rights’ in May, James R. and Daly, Erin (eds), Human Rights and the Environment: Legality, Indivisibility, Dignity and Geography (Edward Elgar, 2019), 288299.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, Les Sources du Droit à l’Eau en Droit International (Editions Johanet, 2013).Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine and Berti Suman, Anna, ‘Citizen Sensing and Ontopolitics in the Anthropocene: Engaging with Covid-19 and Climate Change’ in Milan, Stefania, Treré, Emiliano and Masiero, Silvia (eds), COVID-19 from the Margins: Pandemic Invisibilities, Policies and Resistance in the Datafied Society (Institute of Network Cultures), 225240.Google Scholar
Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas, ‘Critical Environmental Law in the Anthropocene’ in Kotzé, Louis J. (ed), Environmental Law and Governance for the Anthropocene (Hart Publishing, 2017).Google Scholar
Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas, Spatial Justice: Body, Lawscape, Atmosphere (Routledge, 2014).Google Scholar
Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas, ‘Actors or Spectators? Vulnerability and Critical Environmental Law’ (2013) 3 Oñati Socio-Legal Series 5.Google Scholar
Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas, ‘Towards a Critical Environmental Law’ in Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas (ed), Law and Ecology: New Environmental Foundations (Routledge, 2011).Google Scholar
Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas, ‘Spatial Justice: Law and the Geography of Withdrawal’ (2010) 6 International Journal of Law in Context 3.Google Scholar
Picolotti, Romina and Taillant, Jorge D. (eds), Linking Human Rights and the Environment (University of Arizona Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Plater, Zygmunt J. B., ‘From the Beginning, a Fundamental Shift of Paradigms: A Theory and Short History of Environmental Law’ (1994) Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 27.Google Scholar
Porras, Ileana, ‘Appropriating Nature: Commerce, Property, and the Commodification of Nature in the Law of Nations’ (2014) 27:3 Leiden Journal of International Law 641660.Google Scholar
Porter, Libby, ‘Possessory Politics and the Conceit of Procedure: Exposing the Cost of Rights under Conditions of Dispossession’ (2014) 13 Planning Theory 387.Google Scholar
Posner, Eric A., ‘Climate Change and International Human Rights Litigation: A Critical Appraisal’ (2007) 155 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1925.Google Scholar
Postiglione, Amedeo, Global Environmental Governance: The Need for an International Environmental Agency and an International Court of the Environment (Bruylant, 2010).Google Scholar
Pottage, Alain, ‘Perspectives on Environmental Law and the Law Relating to Sustainability: A Continuing Role for Ecofeminism’ in Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas (ed), Law and Ecology: New Environmental Foundations (Routledge, 2011).Google Scholar
Povinelli, Elizabeth A., The Cunning of Recognition: Indigenous Alterities and the Making of Australian Multiculturalism (Duke University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Prieur, Michel, ‘The Human Right to Landscape’ in May, James R. and Daly, Erin (eds), Human Rights and the Environment: Legality, Indivisibility, Dignity and Geography (Edward Elgar, 2019).Google Scholar
Proctor, Robert and Schiebinger, Londa, Agnotology: The Making and Unmaking of Ignorance (Stanford University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Provost, René and Sheppard, Colleen, ‘Human Rights through Legal Pluralism’ in Provost, René and Sheppard, Colleen (eds), Dialogues on Human Rights and Legal Pluralism (Springer, 2013).Google Scholar
Purdy, Jedediah, After Nature: A Politics for the Anthropocene (Harvard University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Raftopoulos, Malayna, ‘REDD and Human Rights: Addressing the Urgent Need for a Full Community Based Human Rights Impact Assessment’ (2016) 20 International Journal of Human Rights 4.Google Scholar
Rajan, S. Ravi, ‘Classical Environmentalism and Environmental Human Rights: An Exploration of their Ontological Origins and Differences’ (2011) 2:1 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 106121.Google Scholar
Ranganathan, Surabhi, ‘Ocean Floor Grab: International Law and the Making of an Extractive Imaginary’ (2019) 30:2 European Journal of International Law 573.Google Scholar
Ranganathan, Surabhi, ‘Global Commons’ (2016) 27 European Journal of International Law 3.Google Scholar
Rao, Malavika, ‘A TWAIL Perspective on Loss and Damage from Climate Change: Reflections from Indira Gandhi’s Speech at Stockholm’ (2022) 12 Asian Journal of International Law 6381.Google Scholar
Rasulov, Akbar, ‘From Apology to Utopia and the Inner Life of International Law’ (2016) 29 Leiden Journal of International Law 641666.Google Scholar
Redclift, Michael, ‘Sustainable Development (1987–2005): An Oxymoron Comes of Age’ (2005) 12 Sustainable Development 212227.Google Scholar
Redford, Kent H., ‘The Ecologically Noble Savage’ (1991) 15:1 Cultural Survival Quarterly 4648.Google Scholar
Renteln, Alison Dundes, ‘Environmental Rights vs. Cultural Rights’ (2004) 2 Human Rights Dialogue 11.Google Scholar
Richardson, Benjamin J., The Art of Environmental Law: Governing with Aesthetics (Hart, 2019).Google Scholar
Richardson, Benjamin J., ‘Doing Time: The Temporalities of Environmental Law’ in Kotzé, Louis J. (ed), Environmental Law and Governance for the Anthropocene (Hart, 2017).Google Scholar
Richardson, Benjamin J., Barritt, Emily and Bowman, Megan, ‘Beauty: A Lingua Franca for Environmental Law?’ (2019) 8 Transnational Environmental Law 1.Google Scholar
Rietig, Katharina, ‘“Neutral” Experts? How Input of Scientific Expertise Matters in International Environmental Negotiations’ (2014) 47 Policy Sciences 2.Google Scholar
Roos, Jerome, ‘The Gilets Jaunes Have Blown Up the Old Political Categories’, ROAR Magazine (2018), at https://popularresistance.org/the-gilets-jaunes-have-blown-up-the-old-political-categories/.Google Scholar
Ross, Anne et al., Indigenous Peoples and the Collaborative Stewardship of Nature: Knowledge Binds and Institutional Conflicts (Routledge, 2011).Google Scholar
Ross, Eric, ‘The Malthus Factor: Poverty, Politics and Population in Capitalist Development’ (2000) 20 CornerHouse Briefing 1.Google Scholar
Rühs, Nathalie, ‘The Implementation of Earth Jurisprudence through Substantive Constitutional Rights of Nature’ (2016) 8 Sustainability 2.Google Scholar
Russell, Edmund, War and Nature: Fighting Humans and Insects with Chemicals from World War I to Silent Spring (Cambridge University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Ryder, Stacia et al. (eds), Environmental Justice in the Anthropocene: From (Un)Just Presents to Just Futures (Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
Saab, Anne, Narratives of Hunger in International Law: Feeding the World in Times of Climate Change (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Saito, Yuriko, Aesthetics of the Familiar: Everyday Life and World-Making (Oxford University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Saito, Yuriko, Everyday Aesthetics (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Sajeva, Giulia, When Rights Embrace Responsibilities: Biocultural Rights and the Conservation of Environment (Oxford University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Sajeva, Giulia, ‘Rights with Limits: Biocultural Rights, Between Self-Determination and Conservation of the Environment’ (2015) 6:1 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 3054.Google Scholar
Sand, Peter H. (ed), The History and Origin of International Environmental Law (Edward Elgar Publishing 2015).Google Scholar
Sand, Peter H. (ed), ‘The Evolution of International Environmental Law’ in Brunnée, Jutta, Bodansky, Daniel and Hey, Ellen (eds), The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Sandholtz, Wayne, Prohibiting Plunder: How Norms Change (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Sands, Philippe, ‘Reflections on International Judicialization’ (2016) 27 European Journal of International Law 4.Google Scholar
Sands, Philippe, ‘Climate Change and the Rule of Law: Adjudicating the Future in International Law’ (2016) 28 Journal of Environmental Law 1935.Google Scholar
Sands, Philippe, ‘Litigating Environmental Disputes: Courts, Tribunals and the Progressive Development of International Environmental Law’ in Ndiaye, Tafsir Malick and Wolfrum, Rüdiger (eds), Law of the Sea, Environmental Law and Settlement of Disputes: Liber Amicorum of Judge Thomas A. Mensah (Martinus Nijhoff, 2007).Google Scholar
Sapignoli, Maria, ‘“Bushmen” in the Law: Evidence and Identity in Botswana’s High Court’ (2017) 40:2 Political and Legal Anthropology Review 210225.Google Scholar
Savaresi, Annalisa, ‘The UN HRC Recognizes the Right to a Healthy Environment and Appoints a New Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Climate Change. What Does It All Mean?’ (EJIL:Talk!, 12 October 2021), at www.ejiltalk.org/the-un-hrc-recognizes-the-right-to-a-healthy-environment-and-appoints-a-new-special-rapporteur-on-human-rights-and-climate-change-what-does-it-all-mean.Google Scholar
Schall, Christian, ‘Public Interest Litigation Concerning Environmental Matters before Human Rights Courts: A Promising Future Concept?’ (2008) 20:3 Journal of Environmental Law 417453.Google Scholar
Schama, Simon, Landscape and Memory (Alfred A. Knopf, 1995).Google Scholar
Schlosberg, David, Defining Environmental Justice: Theories, Movements, and Nature (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Scholtz, Werner (ed), Animal Welfare and International Environmental Law: From Conservation to Compassion (Edward Elgar, 2019).Google Scholar
Schulz, Karsten A., ‘Decolonising Political Ecology: Ontology, Technology and “Critical” Enchantment’ (2017) 24 Journal of Political Ecology 126.Google Scholar
Scott, Joanne and Sturm, Susan, ‘Courts as Catalysts: Rethinking the Judicial Role in New Governance’ (2007) 12 Columbia Journal of European Law 565594.Google Scholar
Seck, Sara L., ‘Relational Law and the Reimagining of Tools for Environmental and Climate Justice’ (2019) 31 Canadian Journal of Women and the Law 151177.Google Scholar
Sellheim, Nikolas, ‘The Right Not to Be Indigenous: Seal Utilization in Newfoundland’ (2014) Arctic Yearbook.Google Scholar
Selman, Paul, ‘On the Meaning of Natural Beauty in Landscape Legislation’ (2010) 35 Landscape Research 1.Google Scholar
Selin, Henrik and Linnér, Björn-Ola, ‘From Species Protection to Environment and Development’ in The Quest for Global Sustainability: International Efforts on Linking Environment and Development (Cambridge: Science, Environment and Development Group, Center for International Development, Harvard University, 2005).Google Scholar
Seyfang, Gill, ‘Environmental Mega-Conferences – From Stockholm to Johannesburg and Beyond’ (2003) 13 Global Environmental Change 3.Google Scholar
Shany, Yuval, ‘No Longer a Weak Department of Power? Reflections on the Emergence of a New International Judiciary’ (2009) 20 European Journal of International Law 7391.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Performance of Regional Human Rights Courts’ in Squatrito, Theresa et al. (eds), The Performance of International Courts and Tribunals (Cambridge University Press, 2018), 114153.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Benefits and Limitations of a Human Rights Approach to Environmental Protection’ (2014) Hungarian Yearbook of International Law and European Law.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Symposium: The Pope’s Encyclical and Climate Change Policy – Dominion and Stewardship’ (2015) AJIL Unbound.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Legitimate and Necessary: Adjudicating Human Rights Violations Related to Activities Causing Environmental Harm or Risk’ (2015) 6:2 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 139155.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Resolving Conflicts between Human Rights and Environmental Protection: Is There a Hierarchy?’ in de Wet, Erika and Vidmar, Jure (eds), Hierarchy in International Law: The Place of Human Rights (Oxford University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Human Rights and the Environment: What Specific Environmental Rights Have Been Recognised?’ (2006) 35 Denver Journal of International Law and Policy 129.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Environmental Rights’ in Alston, Philip (ed), Peoples’ Rights (Oxford University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah (ed), Commitment and Compliance: The Role of Non-binding Norms in the International Legal System (Oxford University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘What Happened in Rio to Human Rights?’ (1993) 3 The Yearbook of International Environmental Law 75.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Human Rights, Environmental Rights, and the Right to Environment’ (1991) 28 Stanford Journal of International Law 103.Google Scholar
Simma, Bruno, From Bilateralism to Community Interest in International Law (Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law, Volume 250, 1994).Google Scholar
Singer, Peter, Animal Liberation: A New Ethics for Our Treatment of Animals (HarperCollins, 1975).Google Scholar
Singh, Julietta, Unthinking Mastery: Dehumanism and Decolonial Entanglements (Duke University Press, 2018)Google Scholar
Steffen, Will, Crutzen, Paul J. and McNeill, John R., ‘The Anthropocene: Are Humans Now Overwhelming the Great Forces of Nature?’ (2007) 36 AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment 8.Google Scholar
Stevens, Stan (ed), Indigenous Peoples, National Parks and Protected Areas: A New Paradigm Linking Conservation, Culture and Rights (University of Arizona Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Stevens, Stan (ed), ‘Implementing the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and International Human Rights Law through the Recognition of ICCAs’ (2010) 17 Policy Matters 181194.Google Scholar
Stevens, Stan (ed), ‘The Legacy of Yellowstone’ in Stevens, Stan (ed), Conservation through Cultural Survival: Indigenous Peoples and Protected Areas (Island Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Stoett, Peter J., ‘Of Whales and People: Normative Theory, Symbolism and the IWC’ (2005) 8 Journal of Wildlife Law and Policy 151175.Google Scholar
Stone Sweet, Alec and Mathews, Jud, ‘Proportionality Balancing and Global Constitutionalism’ (2008) Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 74165.Google Scholar
Stone, Christopher D., ‘Ethics and International Environmental Law’ in Brunnée, Jutta, Bodansky, Daniel and Hey, Ellen (eds), The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Stone, Christopher D., ‘Should Trees Have Standing? Toward Legal Rights for Natural Objects’ (1972) 45 Southern California Law Review 450.Google Scholar
Stoppioni, Edoardo, Le droit non écrit dans le contentieux international économique: Une analyse critique de discours (Brill, 2021).Google Scholar
Suárez-Krabbe, Julia, Race, Rights and Rebels: Alternatives to Human Rights and Development from the Global South (Rowman and Littlefield, 2015).Google Scholar
Sulyok, Katalin, Science and Judicial Reasoning: The Legitimacy of International Environmental Adjudication (Cambridge University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Swyngedouw, Eric, ‘Impossible “Sustainability” and the Post-Political Condition’ in Krueger, Rob and Gibbs, David (eds), The Sustainable Development Paradox (Guilford Press, 2007) 13.Google Scholar
Sykes, Katie, Animal Welfare and International Trade Law: The Impact of the WTO Seal Case (Edward Elgar, 2021).Google Scholar
Szalai, Aniko, ‘Minorities, Indigenous, Roma – Introductory Remarks and Definitions’ in Protection of the Roma Community under International and European Law (Eleven International, 2015), 113.Google Scholar
Takacs, David, ‘The Public Trust Doctrine, Environmental Human Rights and the Future of Private Property’ (2008) 16 NYU Environmental Law Journal 711.Google Scholar
Tănăsescu, Mihnea, ‘Rights of Nature, Legal Personality, and Indigenous Philosophies’ (2020) 9:3 Transnational Environmental Law 429.Google Scholar
Tehan, Maureen F. et al., The Impact of Climate Change Mitigation on Indigenous and Forest Communities: International, National and Local Law Perspectives on REDD+ (Cambridge University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Theriault, Sophie, ‘The Food Security of the Inuit in Times of Change: Alleviating the Tension between Conserving Biodiversity and Access to Food’ (2011) 2 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 2.Google Scholar
Thin, Sarah, ‘Community Interest and the International Public Legal Order’ (2021) 68 Netherlands International Law Review 3559.Google Scholar
Thornes, Tobias, ‘Animals and Climate Change’ (2016) 6:1 Journal of Animal Ethics 81.Google Scholar
Townsend, Dina Lupin, ‘Silencing, Consultation and Indigenous Descriptions of the World’ (2019) 10:2 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 193214.Google Scholar
Treves, Tullio et al. (eds), Non-Compliance Procedures and Mechanisms and the Effectiveness of International Environmental Agreements (T.M.C. Asser Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Tsosie, Rebecca, ‘Indigenous Peoples, Anthropology, and the Legacy of Epistemic Injustice’ in Ian, James Kidd, José, Medina and Gaile, Pohlhaus (eds), The Routledge Handbook of Epistemic Injustice (Routledge, 2017), 356369.Google Scholar
Tsosie, Rebecca, ‘Tribal Environmental Policy in an Era of Self-Determination: The Role of Ethics, Economics and Traditional Ecological Knowledge’ (1996) 21:1 Vermont Law Review 225334.Google Scholar
Tucker, Mary E. and Williams Duncan, R. (eds), Buddhism and Ecology: The Interconnection of Dharma and Deeds (Harvard University Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Tully, Stephen, ‘International Environmental Law and Sustainable Development’ in Tully, Stephen (ed) International Corporate Legal Responsibility (Kluwer Law International, 2012).Google Scholar
Turner, Stephen J., Shelton, Dinah L., Razzaque, Jona, McIntyre, Owen and May, James R. (eds), Environmental Rights: The Development of Standards (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Turnhout, Esther, Tuinstra, Willemijn and Halffman, Willem, Environmental Expertise: Connecting Science, Policy and Society (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Tzouvala, Ntina, Capitalism as Civilisation: A History of International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Untermaïer, Jean, ‘Droit de l’Homme à l’Environnement et Libertés Publiques: Droit individuel ou droit collectif. Droit pour l'individu ou obligation pour l'Etat’ (1978) 4 Revue Juridique de l’Environnement 329367.Google Scholar
Urbina, Francisco J., A Critique of Proportionality and Balancing (Cambridge University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Usher, Phillip J., Exterranean: Extraction in the Humanist Anthropocene (Fordham University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
van Aaken, Anne, ‘Defragmentation of Public International Law through Interpretation: A Methodological Proposal’ (2009) 16 Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 483.Google Scholar
Van den Eynde, Laura, ‘An Empirical Look at the Amicus Curiae Practice of Human Rights NGOs before the European Court of Human Rights’ (2013) 31:3 Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights 271313.Google Scholar
Veit, Peter G. and Benson, Catherine, ‘When Parks and People Collide’ (2004) 2 Human Rights Dialogue 13.Google Scholar
Venzke, Ingo, ‘Semantic Authority’ in Jean, d’Aspremont and Sahib, Singh (eds), Concepts for International Law: Contributions to Disciplinary Thought (Edward Elgar, 2019), 815826.Google Scholar
Venzke, Ingo, ‘Is Interpretation in International Law a Game?’ in Andrea, Bianchi, Daniel, Peat and Matthew, Windsor (eds), Interpretation in International Law (Oxford University Press, 2015), 352370.Google Scholar
Venzke, Ingo, ‘Semantic Authority, Legal Change and the Dynamics of International Law’ (2015) 12 No Foundations 1.Google Scholar
Venzke, Ingo, How Interpretation Makes International Law: On Semantic Change and Normative Twists (Oxford University Press 2012).Google Scholar
Venzke, Ingo, ‘Legal Contestation about “Enemy Combatants”: On the Exercise of Power in Legal Interpretation’ (2009) 5 Journal of International Law and International Relations 155.Google Scholar
Vermeylen, Saskia, ‘Materiality and the Ontological Turn in the Anthropocene: Establishing a Dialogue between Law, Anthropology and Eco-Philosophy’ in Kotzé, Louis J. (ed), Environmental Law and Governance for the Anthropocene (Hart Publishing, 2017), 137162.Google Scholar
Vidas, Davor, Zalasiewicz, Jan and Williams, Mark, ‘What Is the Anthropocene – and Why Is It Relevant for International Law?’ (2015) 25:1 Yearbook of International Environmental Law 3.Google Scholar
Vidas, Davor et al., ‘International Law for the Anthropocene? Shifting Perspectives in Regulation of the Oceans, Environment and Genetic Resources’ (2015) 9:1 Anthropocene 13.Google Scholar
Viñuales, Jorge E., ‘The Rise and Fall of Sustainable Development’ (2013) 22 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 313.Google Scholar
Viñuales, Jorge E., Foreign Investment and the Environment in International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Vogt, William, Road to Survival (Sloane Associates, 1948).Google Scholar
Voigt, Christina (ed), International Judicial Practice on the Environment (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Voigt, Christina and Makuch, Zen (eds), Courts and the Environment (Edward Elgar, 2018).Google Scholar
von Bogdandy, Armin and Venzke, Ingo, ‘The Spell of Precedents: Law Making by International Courts and Tribunals’ in Cesare, Romano, Karen, Alter and Yuval, Shany (eds), The Oxford Handbook of International Adjudication (Oxford University Press, 2013), 503522.Google Scholar
von Bogdandy, Armin and Venzke, Ingo, ‘Beyond Dispute: International Judicial Institutions as Lawmakers’ in Armin, von Bogdandy and Ingo, Venzke (eds), International Judicial Lawmaking on Public Authority and Democratic Legitimation in Global Governance (Springer, 2012).Google Scholar
von Bogdandy, Armin and Venzke, Ingo (eds), ‘Beyond Dispute: International Judicial Institutions as Lawmakers’ (2011) 12 German Law Journal 9791370.Google Scholar
Waibel, Michael, ‘Interpretive Communities in International Law’ in Andrea, Bianchi, Daniel, Peat and Matthew, Windsor (eds), Interpretation in International Law (Oxford University Press, 2015), 147165.Google Scholar
Wainwright, Joel and Bryan, Joe, ‘Cartography, Territory, Property: Postcolonial Reflections on Indigenous Counter-Mapping in Nicaragua and Belize’ (2009) 16:2 Cultural Geographies 153178.Google Scholar
Warnock, Mary, Critical Reflections on Ownership (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015).Google Scholar
Warren, Karen J., Ecofeminist Philosophy: A Western Perspective on What It Is and Why It Matters (Rowman & Littlefield, 2000).Google Scholar
Watts, Vanessa, ‘Indigenous Place-Thought and Agency amongst Humans and Non-humans (First Woman and Sky Woman go on a European World Tour!)’ (2013) 2:1 Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education and Society 2034.Google Scholar
Webber, Grégoire C. N., ‘Proportionality, Balancing and the Cult of Constitutional Rights Scholarship’ (2010) 23:1 Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 179202.Google Scholar
Weimer, Maria and de Ruijter, Anniek (eds), Regulating Risks in the European Union: The Co-production of Expert and Executive Power (Hart Publishing, 2017).Google Scholar
Werner, Wouter G. (ed), Deference in International Courts and Tribunals: Standard of Review and Margin of Appreciation (Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Werner, Wouter G. (ed), ‘The Politics of Expertise: Applying Paradoxes of Scientific Expertise to International Law’ in Ambrus, Monika et al. (eds), The Role of ‘Experts’ in International and European Decision-Making Processes: Advisors, Decision Makers or Irrelevant Actors? (Cambridge University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Westra, Laura, Human Rights: The Common and the Collective (UBC Press, 2011).Google Scholar
White, Lynn, ‘The Historical Roots of Our Ecological Crisis’ (1967) 155 Science 12031207.Google Scholar
Willers, Marc, ‘Climate Change Litigation in European Regional Courts: Jumping Procedural Hurdles to Hold States to Account?’ in Ivano, Alogna, Christine, Bakker and Jean-Pierre, Gauci (eds), Climate Change Litigation: Global Perspectives (Brill, 2021), 294309.Google Scholar
Williams, Eric, Capitalism and Slavery (University of North Carolina Press, 1944).Google Scholar
Wills, Joe, Contesting World Order? Socioeconomic Rights and Global Justice Movements (Cambridge University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Wolfe, Patrick, Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology: The Politics and Poetics of an Ethnographic Event (Cassel, 1999).Google Scholar
Wolfrum, Rüdiger and Matz, Nele, Conflicts in International Environmental Law (Springer, 2003).Google Scholar
Wolloch, Nathaniel, History and Nature in the Enlightenment: Praise of the Mastery of Nature in Eighteenth-Century Historical Literature (Routledge, 2016).Google Scholar
WoodJr., Harold W., ‘The United Nations World Charter for Nature: The Developing Nations’ Initiative to Establish Protections for the Environment’ (1985) 12 Ecology Law Quarterly 4.Google Scholar
Woods, Kerri, ‘Environmental Human Rights’ in Gabrielson, Teena, Hall, Cheryl, Meyer, John M. and Schlosberg, David (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Environmental Political Theory (Oxford University Press, 2016), 333345Google Scholar
Wulf, Andrea, The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World (Alfred A. Knopf, 2015).Google Scholar
Young, Margaret A., ‘Fragmentation’ in Rajamani, Lavanya and Peel, Jacqueline (eds), Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law (2nd edn, Oxford University Press, 2021), 85101.Google Scholar
Young, Margaret A., ‘Global Pact for the Environment: Defragging International Law?’, EJIL: Talk! (2018), at www.ejiltalk.org/global-pact-for-the-environment-defragging-international-law/.Google Scholar
Young, Margaret A. (ed), Regime Interaction in International Law: Facing Fragmentation (Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Young, Margaret A., Trading Fish, Saving Fish: The Interaction between Regimes in International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Yusoff, Kathryn, A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None (University of Minnesota Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Zarbiyev, Fuad, Le discours interprétatif en droit international contemporain: Un essai critique (Bruylant, 2015).Google Scholar
Zarsky, L. (ed), Human Rights and the Environment: Conflicts and Norms in a Globalizing World (Earthscan, 2002).Google Scholar
Zemanek, Karl, ‘New Trends in the Enforcement of Erga Omnes Obligations’ (2000) 4:1 Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law 152.Google Scholar
Abate, Randall S. (ed), What Can Animal Law Learn from Environmental Law? (Environmental Law Institute, 2015).Google Scholar
Adams, Jonathan S. and McShane, Thomas O., The Myth of Wild Africa: Conservation without Illusion (W. W. Norton & Company, 1992).Google Scholar
Adams, Michael, ‘Negotiating Nature: Collaboration and Conflicts between Aboriginal and Conservation Interests in New South Wales, Australia’ (2004) 20 Australian Journal of Environmental Education 3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Addaney, Michael and Oluborode Jegede, Ademola (eds), Human Rights and the Environment under African Union Law (Springer, 2020).Google Scholar
Agrawal, Arun and Redford, Kent, ‘Conservation and Displacement: An Overview?’ (2009) 7 Conservation and Society 1.Google Scholar
Aguila, Yann, ‘A Global Pact for the Environment: The Logical Outcome of 50 Years of International Environmental Law’ (2020) 12:14 Sustainability 5636.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aguila, Yann and Viñuales, Jorge E., ‘A Global Pact for the Environment: Conceptual Foundations’ (2019) 28:1 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 312.Google Scholar
Akande, Dapo et al. (eds), Human Rights and 21st Century Challenges: Poverty, Conflict, and the Environment (Oxford University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Alemanno, Alberto, ‘EU Risk Regulation and Science: The Role of Experts in Decision-Making and Judicial Review’ in Vos, Ellen (ed), European Risk Governance: Its Science, Its Inclusiveness and Its Effectiveness (Connex, 2008).Google Scholar
Ali Mekouar, Mohamed, ‘Le Droit à l’Environnement dans ses Rapports avec les Autres Droits de l’Homme’ in Kromarek, Pascale (ed), Environnement et Droits de l’Homme (UNESCO Publications, 1987).Google Scholar
Alogna, Ivano, Bakker, Christine and Gauci, Jean-Pierre (eds), Climate Change Litigation: Global Perspectives (Brill, 2021).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aloni, Omer, The League of Nations and the Protection of the Environment (Cambridge University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Alter, Karen J., The New Terrain of International Law: Courts, Politics, Rights (Princeton University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Altwicker, Tilmann, ‘Non-Universal Arguments under the European Convention on Human Rights’ (2020) 31:1 European Journal of International Law 101126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ambrus, Monika et al. (eds), The Role of ‘Experts’ in International and European Decision-Making Processes: Advisors, Decision Makers or Irrelevant Actors? (Cambridge University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Amechi, Emeka Polycarp, ‘Enhancing Environmental Protection and Socio-Economic Development in Africa: A Fresh Look at the Right to a General Satisfactory Environment under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights’ (2009) 5 Law, Environment and Development Journal 58.Google Scholar
Anaya, James, ‘Environmentalism, Human Rights and Indigenous Peoples: A Tale of Converging and Diverging Interests’ (1999/2000) 7 Buffalo Environmental Law Journal 1.Google Scholar
Anderson, David and Grove, Richard H. (eds), Conservation in Africa: Peoples, Policies and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 1989).Google Scholar
Anker, Kirsten et al. (eds), From Environmental Law to Ecological Law (Routledge, 2020).Google Scholar
Anton, Donald K. and Shelton, Dinah (eds), Environmental Protection and Human Rights (Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Aravamudan, Srinivas, ‘From Enlightenment to the Anthropocene: Vico Behind or Ahead of His Time?’ (2018) 47 Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture 7.Google Scholar
Argyrou, Vassos, The Logic of Environmentalism: Anthropology, Ecology, and Postcoloniality (Berghahn Books, 2005).Google Scholar
Averill, Marilyn, ‘Linking Climate Litigation and Human Rights’ (2009) 18 Review of European Community and International Environmental Law 139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atapattu, Sumudu A., Gonzalez, Carmen G. and Seck, Sara L. (eds), The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Justice and Sustainable Development (Cambridge University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Atapattu, Sumudu A. and Schapper, Andrea, Human Rights and the Environment: Key Issues (Routledge, 2019).Google Scholar
Avgerinopoulou, Dionysia-Theodora, Science-Based Lawmaking: How to Effectively Integrate Science in International Environmental Law (Springer, 2019).Google Scholar
Baetens, Freya (ed), The Legitimacy of Unseen Actors in International Adjudication (Cambridge University Press, 2019).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baetens, Freya and Caiado, José (eds), Frontiers of International Economic Law: Legal Tools to Confront Interdisciplinary Challenges (Brill Nijhoff, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banach, Edo, ‘The Roma and the Native Americans: Encapsulated Communities within Larger Constitutional Regimes’ (2002) 14 Florida Journal of International Law 353.Google Scholar
Barad, Karen, Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter (Duke University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Barbier De La Serre, Eric and Sibony, Anne-Lise, ‘Expert Evidence before the EC Courts’ (2008) 45:4 Common Market Law Review 941985.Google Scholar
Barritt, Emily, ‘The Story of Stewardship and Ecological Restoration’ in Afshin, Akhtar-Khavari and Benjamin, Richardson (eds), Ecological Restoration Law: Concepts and Case Studies (Routledge 2019), 72.Google Scholar
Bartel, Robyn et al. (eds), Rethinking Wilderness and the Wild Conflict, Conservation and Co-existence (Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
Bashford, Alison, Global Population: History, Geopolitics and Life on Earth (Columbia University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Bastian, Michelle et al. (eds), Participatory Research in More-than-Human Worlds (Routledge, 2017).Google Scholar
Bastida, Ana Elizabet, The Law and Governance of Mining and Minerals: A Global Perspective (Hart, 2020).Google Scholar
Bavikatte, Sanjay Kabir and Bennett, Tom, ‘Community Stewardship: The Foundation of Biocultural Rights’ (2015) 6 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bavikatte, Sanjay Kabir, Stewarding the Earth: Rethinking Property and the Emergence of Biocultural Rights (Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Behrens, Kevin, ‘Exploring African Holism with Respect to the Environment’ (2010) 19:4 Environmental Values 465484.Google Scholar
Black, C. F., The Land is the Source of the Law: A Dialogical Encounter with Indigenous Jurisprudence (Routledge, 2011).Google Scholar
Puig de la Bellacasa, Maria, Matters of Care: Speculative Ethics in More than Human Worlds (University of Minnesota Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Bennett, Joshua, Being Property Once Myself: Blackness and the End of Man (Harvard University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Bennett, Jane, Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things (Duke University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Besson, Samantha, ‘Community Interests in International Law: Whose Interests Are They and How Should We Best Identify Them?’ in Eyal, Benvenisti and Georg, Nolte (eds), Community Interests across International Law (Oxford University Press, 2018), 3649.Google Scholar
Bianchi, Andrea, Peat, Daniel and Windsor, Matthew (eds), Interpretation in International Law (Oxford University Press, 2015).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biermann, Frank, Earth System Governance: World Politics in the Anthropocene (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank, ‘The Case for a World Environment Organization’ (2000) 42:9 Environment Science and Policy for Sustainable Development 22.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank, ‘Common Concern of Humankind: The Emergence of a New Concept of International Environmental Law’ (1996) 34:4 Archiv des Völkerrechts 426481.Google Scholar
Birnie, Patricia, Boyle, Alan and Redgwell, Catherine, International Law and the Environment (3rd edn, Oxford University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Birrell, Kathleen and Matthews, Daniel, ‘Laws for the Anthropocene: Orientations, Encounters, Imaginaries’ (2020) 31:3 Law and Critique 233238.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birrell, Kathleen, Godden, Lee and Tehan, Maureen, ‘Climate Change and REDD+: Property as a Prism for Conceiving Indigenous Peoples’ Engagement’ (2012) 3 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 2.Google Scholar
Bleicher, Alena and Pehlken, Alexandra (eds), The Material Basis of Energy Transitions (Academic Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Santos, Boaventura de Sousa, Toward a New Legal Common Sense: Law, Globalization and Emancipation (2nd edn, Butterworths, 2002).Google Scholar
Bobby Banerjee, Subhabrata, ‘Who Sustains Whose Development? Sustainable Development and the Reinvention of Nature’ (2003) 24 Organization Studies 1.Google Scholar
Bodansky, Daniel, ‘The Legitimacy of International Governance: A Coming Challenge for International Environmental Law?’ (1999) 93 American Journal of International Law 596624.Google Scholar
Bonine, John E., ‘The Public’s Right to Enforce Environmental Law’ in Stec, Stephen (ed), Handbook on Access to Justice under the Aarhus Convention (REC, Szentendre 2003), 3137.Google Scholar
Bonneuil, Christophe and Fressoz, Jean-Batiste, L’Evénement Anthropocène: La Terre, l’histoire et nous (Broché, 2016).Google Scholar
Borgen, Christopher J., ‘Treaty Conflicts and Normative Fragmentation’ in Hollis, Duncan B. (ed) The Oxford Guide to Treaties (Oxford University Press, 2012), 448470.Google Scholar
Borgen, Christopher J., ‘Resolving Treaty Conflicts’ (2005) 37 George Washington International Law Review 573648.Google Scholar
Bosselmann, Klaus, ‘Environmental and Human Rights in Ethical Context’ in Grear, Anna and Kotzé, Louis J. (eds), Research Handbook on Human Rights and the Environment (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015), 531550.Google Scholar
Botzler, Richard G. and Armstrong, Susan J. (eds), Environmental Ethics: Divergence and Convergence (2nd edn, McGraw-Hill, 1998).Google Scholar
Boyd, David R., ‘Catalyst for Change: Evaluating Forty Years of Experience in Implementing the Right to a Healthy Environment’ in Knox, John H. and Pejan, Ramin (eds), The Human Right to a Healthy Environment (Cambridge University Press, 2018), 1741.Google Scholar
Boyle, Alan, ‘Human Rights and the Environment: Where Next?’ (2012) 23:3 European Journal of International Law 613.Google Scholar
Boyle, Alan, ‘Human Rights or Environmental Rights? A Reassessment’ (2006) 18 Fordham Environmental Law Review 471.Google Scholar
Boyle, Alan and Harrison, James, ‘Judicial Settlement of International Environmental Disputes: Current Problems’ (2013) 4 Journal of International Dispute Settlement 245.Google Scholar
Braidotti, Rosi, Posthuman Knowledge (Polity, 2019).Google Scholar
Braidotti, Rosi, ‘A Theoretical Framework for the Critical Posthumanities’ (2018) Theory, Culture & Society 131.Google Scholar
Brighton, Claire, ‘Unlikely Bedfellows: The Evolution of the Relationship between Environmental Protection and Development’ (2017) 66 International & Comparative Law Quarterly 209.Google Scholar
Brinks, Daniel M., ‘Access to What? Legal Agency and Access to Justice for Indigenous Peoples in Latin America’ (2019) 55:3 The Journal of Development Studies 348365.Google Scholar
Brown Weiss, Edith, ‘The Evolution of International Environmental Law’ (2011) 54 Japanese Yearbook of International Law 127.Google Scholar
Brown Weiss, Edith, In Fairness to Future Generations: International Law, Common Patrimony and Intergenerational Equity (Transnational Publishers, 1989).Google Scholar
Brown, Harrison, The Challenge of Man’s Future (Viking Press, 1954).Google Scholar
Brundtland Report, World Commission on Environment and Development: Our Common Future (Oxford University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Brunnée, Jutta, ‘“Common Interests” – Echoes from an Empty Shell? – Some Thoughts on Common Interests and International Environmental Law’ (1989) 49 Zeitschrift für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht 791808.Google Scholar
Burdon, Peter (ed), ‘The Earth Community and Ecological Jurisprudence’ (2013) 3 Oñati Socio-Legal Series 5.Google Scholar
Burdon, Peter (ed), Exploring Wild Law – The Philosophy of Earth Jurisprudence (Wakefield Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Burger, Michael, ‘Environmental Law/Environmental Literature’ (2013) 40 Ecology Law Quarterly 158.Google Scholar
Bürli, Nicole, Third-Party Interventions before the European Court of Human Rights: Amicus Curiae, Member-State and Third-Party Interventions (Intersentia, 2017).Google Scholar
Burns, William and Osofsky, Hari (eds), Adjudicating Climate Change (Cambridge University Press, 2009).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Çalı, Basak, ‘Authority’ in d’Aspremont, Jean and Singh, Sahib (eds), Concepts for International Law: Contributions to Disciplinary Thought (Edward Elgar, 2019), 3953.Google Scholar
Campbell, Tim E. J., ‘The Political Meaning of Stockholm: Third World Participation in the Environment Conference Process’ (1973) 8 Stanford Journal of International Studies 138.Google Scholar
Cambou, Dorothée, ‘The Impact of the Ban on Seal Products on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: A European Issue’ (2013) Yearbook of Polar Law 389415.Google Scholar
Cançado Trindade, Antônio Augusto, International Law for Humankind: Towards a New Jus Gentium (Martinus Nijhoff, 2010).Google Scholar
Cançado Trindade, Antônio Augusto, ‘Environmental Protection and the Absence of Restrictions on Human Rights’ in Mahoney, Kathleen E. and Mahoney, Paul (eds), Human Rights in the Twenty-First Century: A Global Challenge (Martinus Nijhoff, 1993).Google Scholar
Cançado Trindade, Antônio Augusto, ‘The Parallel Evolutions of International Human Rights Protection and of Environmental Protection and the Absence of Restrictions on the Exercise of Recognised Human Rights’ (1991) 13 Revista del Instituto Interamericano de Derechos Humanos 3576.Google Scholar
Trindade, Cançado, Augusto, Antônio and Leal, Barros, César, (eds), Human Rights and Environment (Fortaleza, 2017).Google Scholar
Cao, Deborah and White, Steven (eds), Animal Law and Welfare – International Perspectives (Springer, 2016).Google Scholar
Capra, Fritjof and Mattei, Ugo, The Ecology of Law: Toward a Legal System in Tune with Nature and Community (Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2015).Google Scholar
Cardesa-Salzmann, Antonio, ‘Constitutionalising Secondary Rules in Global Environmental Regimes: Non-compliance Procedures and the Enforcement of Multilateral Environmental Agreements’ (2012) 24 Journal of Environmental Law 103.Google Scholar
Carson, Rachel, Silent Spring (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1962).Google Scholar
Casey-Maslen, Stuart, The Right to Life under International Law: An Interpretative Manual (Cambridge University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh, The Climate of History in a Planetary Age (University of Chicago Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh, ‘Planetary Crises and the Difficulty of Being Modern’ (2018) 46 Millennium: Journal of International Studies 259.Google Scholar
Cernea, Michael M. and Mathur, Hari Mohan (eds), Can Compensation Prevent Impoverishment? Reforming Resettlement Through Investments and Benefit-Sharing (Oxford University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Cernea, Michael M. and Schmidt-Soltau, Kai, ‘The End of Forcible Displacement? Conservation Must Not Impoverish People’ (2003) 12 Policy Matters 44.Google Scholar
Chamberlain, Lisa, ‘Beyond Litigation: The Need for Creativity in Working to Realise Environmental Rights’ (2017) 13:1 Law, Environment and Development Journal 112.Google Scholar
Chandler, David and Reid, Julian, Becoming Indigenous: Governing Imaginaries in the Anthropocene (Rowman & Littlefield, 2019).Google Scholar
Chang, Felix B. and Rucker-Chang, Sunnie T., Roma Rights and Civil Rights: A Transatlantic Comparison (Cambridge University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Chapron, Guillaume et al., ‘Bolster Legal Boundaries to Stay within Planetary Boundaries’ (2017) 1 Nature Ecology & Evolution 1.Google Scholar
Churchill, Robin, ‘Environmental Rights in Existing Human Rights Treaties’ in Boyle, Alan and Anderson, Michael R. (eds), Human Rights Approaches to Environmental Protection (Oxford University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Ciocchini, Pablo and Khoury, Stefanie, ‘A Gramscian Approach to Studying the Judicial Decision-Making Process’ (2018) 26:1 Critical Criminology 7590.Google Scholar
Cittadino, Federica, Incorporating Indigenous Rights in the International Regime on Biodiversity Protection: Access, Benefit-sharing and Conservation in Indigenous Lands (Brill, 2019).Google Scholar
Claridge, Lucy, ‘Litigation as a Tool for Community Empowerment: The Case of Kenya’s Ogiek’ (2018) 1 Erasmus Law Review 5766.Google Scholar
Clark, Nigel and Szerszynski, Bronislaw, Planetary Social Thought: The Anthropocene Challenge to the Social Sciences (Polity, 2020).Google Scholar
Crawford, James and Nevill, Penelope, ‘Relations between International Courts and Tribunals: The “Regime Problem”’ in Young, Margaret A. (ed), Regime Interaction in International Law: Facing Fragmentation (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 235260.Google Scholar
Collins, Lynda, ‘Judging the Anthropocene: Transformative Adjudication in the Anthropocene Epoch’ in Kotzé, Louis J. (ed), Environmental Law and Governance for the Anthropocene (Hart Publishing, 2017), 309328.Google Scholar
Conklin, Beth, ‘Body Paint, Feathers, and VCRs: Aesthetics in Authenticity in Amazonian Activism’ (1997) 24:4 American Ethnologist 711737.Google Scholar
Coole, Diana and Frost, Samantha, ‘Introducing the New Materialisms’ in Coole, Diana and Frost, Samantha (eds), New Materialisms: Ontology, Agency, and Politics (Duke University Press, 2010), 145.Google Scholar
Corntassel, Jeff, ‘Towards Sustainable Self-Determination: Rethinking the Contemporary Indigenous Rights Discourse’ (2008) 33 Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cotula, Lorenzo, Human Rights, Natural Resource, and Investment Law in a Globalised World: Shades of Grey in the Shadow of the Law (Routledge, 2012).Google Scholar
Cover, Robert M., ‘Violence and the Word’ (1986) 95 Yale Law Journal 1601.Google Scholar
Cox, Robert W., ‘The Way Ahead: Toward a New Ontology of World Order’ in Wyn Jones, Richard (ed), Critical Theory and World Politics (Boulder, 2001).Google Scholar
Cox, Robert W., ‘Gramsci, Hegemony and International Relations: An Essay in Method’ in Gill, Stephen (ed), Gramsci, Historical Materialism and International Relations (Cambridge University Press, 1993), 4966.Google Scholar
Cox, Robert W., Production, Power and World Order: Social Forces in the Making of History (Columbia University Press, 1987)Google Scholar
Coyle, Sean, ‘Property Rights, Environmental Justice and Worldly Order – Lessons from Natural Law’ in Grear, Anna and Kotzé, Louis J. (eds), Research Handbook on Human Rights and the Environment (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015), 102120.Google Scholar
Cronon, William (ed), Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature (Paperback, 1996).Google Scholar
Cronon, William (ed), ‘The Trouble with Wilderness: Or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature’ (1996) 1:1 Environmental History 728.Google Scholar
Crow, Kevin, ‘A Taxonomy of Proportionality in International Courts’ (2017) iCourts Working Paper Series No. 107.Google Scholar
Crutzen, Paul J. and Stoermer, Eugene F., ‘The “Anthropocene”’ (2000) 41 Global Change Newsletter 1718.Google Scholar
Cullen, Helen et al., Experts, Networks, Advocacy and Mediation (Cambridge University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Cullinan, Cormac, Wild Law: A Manifesto for Earth Justice (2nd edn, Green Books, 2003).Google Scholar
Cusato, Eliana, The Ecology of War and Peace: Marginalising Slow and Structural Violence in International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Daly, Erin and May, James R., ‘Indivisibility of Human and Environmental Rights’ in Michael, Faure (ed), Elgar Encyclopedia of Environmental Law (Edward Elgar, 2019), 171182.Google Scholar
d’Aspremont, Jean, ‘Martti Koskenniemi, the Mainstream, and Self-Reflectivity’ (2016) 29 Leiden Journal of International Law 625.Google Scholar
d’Aspremont, Jean, ‘Wording in International Law’ (2012) 25 Leiden Journal of International Law 575.Google Scholar
d’Aspremont, Jean and Mbengue, Makane M., ‘Strategies of Engagement with Scientific Fact-Finding in International Adjudication’ (2014) 5 Journal of International Dispute Settlement 240272.Google Scholar
Dąbrowska-Kłosińska, Patrycja, ‘Risk, Precaution and Scientific Complexity before the Court of Justice of the European Union’ in Gruszczynski, Lukasz and Werner, Wouter (eds), Deference in International Courts and Tribunals: Standard of Review and Margin of Appreciation (Oxford University Press, 2014), 192208.Google Scholar
Das, Onitas, ‘Natural Resources, Conflict and Investment: Conflict Minerals in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Challenges for Sustainable Investments’, and Abdullah Al Faruque, ‘Sustainable Mining, Human Rights and Foreign Investment: Nexus and Challenges’ in Shawkat, Alam et al. (eds), International Natural Resources Law, Investment and Sustainability (Routledge, 2018).Google Scholar
Davies, Margaret, EcoLaw: Legality, Life, and the Normativity of Nature (Routledge, 2022).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davies, Margaret, Law Unlimited (Routledge, 2017).Google Scholar
Davis, Heather and Todd, Zoe, ‘On the Importance of a Date, or, Decolonizing the Anthropocene’ (2017) 16:4 An International Journal for Critical Geographies 761.Google Scholar
DeLoughrey, Elizabeth and Handley, George, Postcolonial Ecologies: Literatures of the Environment (Oxford University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
De Lucia, Vito, ‘A Critical Interrogation of the Relation between the Ecosystem Approach and Ecosystem Services’ (2018) 27:2 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 104114.Google Scholar
De Lucia, Vito, ‘Beyond Anthropocentrism and Ecocentrism: A Biopolitical Reading of Environmental Law’ (2017) 8:2 Journal of Environmental Law 181202.Google Scholar
De Lucia, Vito, ‘Competing Narratives and Complex Genealogies: The Ecosystem Approach in International Environmental Law’ (2015) 27:1 Journal of Environmental Law 91117.Google Scholar
de Sadeleer, Nicolas, ‘Enforcing EUCHR Principles and Fundamental Rights in Environmental Cases’ (2012) 81 Nordic Journal of International Law 3974.Google Scholar
de Wet, Erika and Vidmar, Jure, ‘Conflicts between International Paradigms: Hierarchy versus Systemic Integration’ (2013) 2 Global Constitutionalism 196.Google Scholar
Dehm, Julia, Reconsidering REDD+: Authority, Power and Law in the Green Economy (Cambridge University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Dejeant-Pons, Maguelonne and Pallemaerts, Marc (eds), Human Rights and the Environment, Compendium of Instruments and Other International Texts on Individual and Collective Rights Relating to the Environment in the International and European Framework (Strasbourg: Council of Europe, 2002).Google Scholar
Denevan, William M., ‘The Pristine Myth: Landscape of the Americas in 1492’ (1992) 82 Annals of the Association of American Geographers 3.Google Scholar
Demos, Thomas J., Decolonizing Nature: Contemporary Art and the Politics of Ecology (Sternberg Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Desai, Bharat H. and Sidhu, Balraj K., ‘International Courts and Tribunals – The New Environmental Sentinels in International Law’ (2020) 50 Environmental Policy and Law 17.Google Scholar
Desmet, Ellen, Indigenous Rights Entwined with Nature Conservation (Intersentia, 2011).Google Scholar
Dobrushi, Andi and Alexandridis, Theodoros, ‘International Housing Rights and Domestic Prejudice: The Case of Roma and Travellers’ in Malcolm, Langford, César, Rodríguez-Garavito and Julieta, Rossi (eds), Social Rights Judgments and the Politics of Compliance: Making It Stick (Cambridge University Press, 2017), 436472.Google Scholar
Dolidze, Anna, ‘Making International Property Law: The Role of Amici Curiae in International Judicial Decision-Making’ (2012) 40:1 Syracuse Journal of International Law and Commerce 119154.Google Scholar
Dommen, Caroline, ‘Claiming Environmental Rights: Some Possibilities Offered by The United Nations’ Human Rights Mechanisms’ (1998) 11 Georgetown International Environmental Law Review 3.Google Scholar
Doolittle, Amity A., ‘Fortress Conservation’ in Paul, Robbins (ed), Encyclopedia of Environment and Society (Sage, 2007), 704705.Google Scholar
dos Reis, Filipe and Kessler, Oliver, ‘Legitimacy’ in d’Aspremont, Jean and Singh, Sahib (eds), Concepts for International Law: Contributions to Disciplinary Thought (Edward Elgar, 2019), 650661.Google Scholar
Douglass, Bruce, ‘The Common Good and the Public Interest’ (1980) 8:1 Political Theory 103–117.Google Scholar
Dowie, Mark, Conservation Refugees: The Hundred-Year Conflict between Global Conservation and Native Peoples (MIT Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Drichel, Simone (ed), Relationality (Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
Dudley, Nigel and Stolton, Sue, Leaving Space for Nature: The Critical Role of Area-Based Conservation (Routledge, 2020).Google Scholar
Dupuy, Pierre-Marie and Viñuales, Jorge E., ‘Emergence and Development’ in International Environmental Law (Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Dupuy, Pierre-Marie, ‘The Philosophy of the Rio Declaration’ in Viñuales, Jorge E. (ed), The Rio Declaration on Environment and Development: A Commentary (Oxford University Press, 2015), 6572.Google Scholar
Dupuy, Pierre-Marie, ‘International Environmental Law: Looking at the Past to Shape the Future’ in Dupuy, Pierre-Marie and Viñuales, Jorge E. (eds), Harnessing Foreign Investment to Promote Environmental Protection: Incentives and Safeguards (Cambridge University Press 2013), 923.Google Scholar
Dupuy, Pierre-Marie, ‘The Danger of Fragmentation or Unification of the International Legal System and the International Court of Justice’ (1998) 31:4 NYU Journal of International Law and Politics 791808.Google Scholar
Eckel, Jan and Moyn, Samuel (eds), The Breakthrough: Human Rights in the 1970s (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Ehrlich, Paul and Ehrlich, Anne, The Population Bomb (Ballantine Books, 1968).Google Scholar
Ellis, Jaye, ‘Scientific Expertise and Transnational Standards: Authority, Legitimacy, Validity’ (2017) 8:2 Transnational Legal Theory 181–201.Google Scholar
Emeseh, Engobo, ‘Human Rights Dimensions of Contemporary Environmental Protection’ in Odello, Marco and Cavandoli, Sofia (eds), Emerging Areas of Human Rights in the 21st Century: The Role of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Routledge, 2011), 6686.Google Scholar
Engle Merry, Sally, ‘Transnational Human Rights and Local Activism: Mapping the Middle’ (2006) 108:1 American Anthropologist 3851.Google Scholar
Engle Merry, Sally, ‘Courts as Performances: Domestic Violence Hearings in Hawai’i Family Court’ in Lazarus-Black, Mindie and Hirsch, Susan F. (eds), Contested States: Law, Hegemony and Resistance (Routledge, 1994).Google Scholar
Etermire, Uzuazo, ‘Insights on the UNEP Bali Guidelines and the Development of Environmental Democratic Rights’ (2016) 23 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 393.Google Scholar
Fakhri, Michael, ‘Markets, Sovereignty, and Racialization’ (2022) 25 Journal of International Economic Law 117.Google Scholar
Feichtner, Isabel and Ranganathan, Surabhi (eds), ‘Symposium: International Law and Economic Exploitation in the Global Commons’ (2019) 30 European Journal of International Law 541.Google Scholar
Feichtner, Isabel and Ranganathan, Surabhi (eds), ‘International Law and Economic Exploitation in the Global Commons: Introduction’ (2019) 30:2 European Journal of International Law 541546.Google Scholar
Femia, Joseph V., ‘The Concept of Hegemony’ in Femia, Joseph V., Gramsci’s Political Thought: Hegemony, Consciousness, and the Revolutionary Process (Oxford University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Fernández Fernández, Edgar and Malwé, Claire, ‘The Emergence of the “Planetary Boundaries” Concept in International Environmental Law: A Proposal for a Framework Convention’ (2018) 28:1 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 48.Google Scholar
Fischer Kuh, Katrina, ‘An Unnatural Divide: How Law Obscures Individual Environmental Harms’ in Hirokawa, Keith H. (ed), Environmental Law and Contrasting Ideas of Nature: A Constructivist Approach (Cambridge University Press, 2014), 2846.Google Scholar
Fischer-Lescano, Andreas and Teubner, Gunther, ‘Regime Collisions: The Vain Search for Legal Unity in the Fragmentation of International Law’ (2004) 25 Michigan Journal of International Law 999.Google Scholar
Fitzmaurice, Malgosia, ‘Indigenous Peoples and Intergenerational Equity as an Emerging Aspect of Ethno-Cultural Diversity in International Law’ in Pentassuglia, Gaetano (ed), Ethno-Cultural Diversity and Human Rights: Challenges and Critiques (Brill Nijhoff, 2018), 188222.Google Scholar
Fitzmaurice, Malgosia, Whaling and International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Forlati, Serena, Mbengue, Makane Moïse and McGarry, Brian (eds), The Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros Judgment and Its Contribution to the Development of International Law (Brill, 2020).Google Scholar
Foster, Caroline E., Science and the Precautionary Principle in International Courts and Tribunals: Expert Evidence, Burden of Proof and Finality (Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Francioni, Francesco (ed), ‘Realism, Utopia and the Future of International Environmental Law’ (2012) EUI Working Papers Law 2012/11, at http://cadmus.eui.eu/handle/1814/21755.Google Scholar
Francioni, Francesco (ed), ‘International Human Rights in the Environmental Horizon’ (2010) 21 European Journal of International Law 41.Google Scholar
Francioni, Francesco (ed), Environment, Human Rights and International Trade (Hart Publishing, 2001).Google Scholar
Fraser, Nancy, Scales of Justice: Reimagining Political Space in a Globalizing World (Columbia University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
French, Duncan and Kotzé, Louis J. (eds), Research Handbook on Law, Governance and Planetary Boundaries (Edward Elgar, 2021).Google Scholar
Gandhi, Indira, ‘Address of Shrimati Indira Gandhi, Prime Minister of India: The Unfinished Revolution’, Part V of ‘A Special Report: What Happened at Stockholm’ (1972) 28:7 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.Google Scholar
Gardoni, Paolo et al. (eds), Risk Analysis of Natural Hazards: Interdisciplinary Challenges and Integrated Solutions (Springer, 2016).Google Scholar
Garver, Geoffrey, Ecological Law and the Planetary Crisis: A Legal Guide for Harmony on Earth (Routledge, 2020).Google Scholar
Gearty, Conor, ‘Do Human Rights Help or Hinder Environmental Protection?’ (2010) 1:1 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 722.Google Scholar
Geertz, Clifford, ‘Local Knowledge: Fact and Law in Comparative Perspective’ in Geertz, Clifford (ed), Local Knowledge: Further Essays in Interpretive Anthropology (Basic Books, 1983), 167234.Google Scholar
Geisler, Charles C., Your Park, My Poverty: The Growth of Greenlining in Africa (Mimeo, 2001).Google Scholar
Geisler, Charles C., ‘Endangered Humans: How Global Land Conservation Efforts Are Creating a Growing Class of Invisible Refugees’ (2001) Foreign Policy.Google Scholar
Gellers, Joshua C., Rights for Robots: Artificial Intelligence, Animal and Environmental Law (Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
George, Timothy S., Minamata: Pollution and the Struggle for Democracy in Postwar Japan (Harvard University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Gilbert, Jérémie, ‘Indigenous Peoples and Litigation: Strategies for Legal Empowerment’ (2020) 12:2 Journal of Human Rights Practice 301320.Google Scholar
Gilbert, Jérémie, Natural Resources, Human Rights and International Law: An Appraisal (Oxford University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Gilbert, Jérémie, ‘Litigating Indigenous Peoples’ Rights in Africa: Potentials, Challenges and Limitations’ (2017) 66:3 International and Comparative Law Quarterly 657686.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilbert, Jérémie, Indigenous Peoples’ Land Rights under International Law: From Victims to Actors (2nd edn, Brill Nijhoff, 2016).Google Scholar
Gilbert, Jérémie and Begbie-Clench, Ben, ‘“Mapping for Rights”: Indigenous Peoples, Litigation and Legal Empowerment’ (2018) 1 Erasmus Law Review 713.Google Scholar
Gill, Bikrum, ‘Beyond the Premise of Conquest: Indigenous and Black Earth-worlds in the Anthropocene Debates’ (2021) 18:6 Globalizations 912928.Google Scholar
Glover, James M., ‘Soul of the Wilderness: Can We Stop Trying to Control Nature?’ (2000) 6:1 International Journal of Wilderness 4.Google Scholar
Golder, Ben, ‘Beyond Redemption? Problematising the Critique of Human Rights in Contemporary International Legal Thought’ (2014) 2:1 London Review of International Law 77114.Google Scholar
Gonzalez, Carmen G., ‘Bridging the North-South Divide: International Environmental Law in the Anthropocene’ (2015) 32 Pace Environmental Law Review 407.Google Scholar
Gramsci, Antonio, Selections from the Prison Notebooks (ed and trans Q. Hoare and G. Nowell Smith, Lawrence and Wishart, 1971).Google Scholar
Grant, Evadne, ‘International Human Rights Courts and Environmental Human Rights: Re-Imagining Adjudicative Paradigms’ (2015) 6:2 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 156176.Google Scholar
Grant, Evadne, Kotzé, Louis J. and Morrow, Karen, ‘Human Rights and the Environment: In Search of a New Relationship: Synergies and Common Themes’ (2013) 3 Oñati Socio-Legal Series 5.Google Scholar
Grear, Anna, ‘It’s Wrongheaded to Protect Nature with Human-Style Rights’ (19 March 2019, Aeon Magazine), at https://aeon.co/ideas/its-wrongheaded-to-protect-nature-with-human-style-rights.Google Scholar
Grear, Anna, ‘Deconstructing Anthropos: A Critical Legal Reflection on “Anthropocentric” Law and Anthropocene Humanity’ (2015) 26 Law Critique 225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grear, Anna, Boulot, Emille, Sterlin, Joshua and Vargas-Roncancio, Iván Darío (eds), ‘Posthuman Legalities: New Materialism and Law Beyond the Human’ (2021) 12:1 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment.Google Scholar
Grove, Kevin and Chandler, David, ‘Introduction: Resilience and the Anthropocene: The Stakes of “Renaturalising” Politics’ (2017) 5:2 Resilience 7991.Google Scholar
Grove, Richard H., Green Imperialism. Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism, 1600–1860 (Cambridge University Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Grusin, Richard (ed), Anthropocene Feminism (University of Minnesota Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Hajjar Leib, Linda, Human Rights and the Environment: Philosophical, Theoretical and Legal Perspectives (Martinus Nijhoff, 2011).Google Scholar
Hale, Charles R., ‘Activist Research v. Cultural Critique: Indigenous Land Rights and the Contradictions of Politically Engaged Anthropology’ (2006) 21:1 Cultural Anthropology 196120.Google Scholar
Hale, Charles R., ‘Neoliberal Multiculturalism: The Remaking of Cultural Rights and Racial Dominance in Central America’ (2005) 28:1 Political and Legal Anthropology Review 1028.Google Scholar
Halme-Tuomisaari, Miia and Slotte, Pamela (eds), Revisiting the Origins of Human Rights (Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Hamilton, Clive, Bonneuil, Christophe and Gemenne, François (eds), The Anthropocene and the Global Environmental Crisis: Rethinking Modernity in a New Epoch (Routledge, 2015).Google Scholar
Hancock, Jan, Environmental Human Rights: Power, Ethics and Law (Routledge, 2003).Google Scholar
Haraway, Donna J., Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene (Duke University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Haraway, Donna J., ‘Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Plantationocene, Chthulucene: Making Kin’ (2015) 6 Environmental Humanities 159165.Google Scholar
Hardin, Garrett, ‘The Tragedy of the Commons’ (1968) 162 Science 1243.Google Scholar
Hauser, Gerard A., ‘The Moral Vernacular of Human Rights Discourse’ (2008) 41 Philosophy and Rhetoric 4.Google Scholar
Hayward, Tim, ‘International Political Theory and the Global Environment: Some Critical Questions for Liberal Cosmopolitans’ (2009) 40:2 Journal of Social Philosophy 276295.Google Scholar
Hayward, Tim, ‘Human Rights versus Emissions Rights: Climate Justice and the Equitable Distribution of Ecological Space’ (2007) 21 Ethics and International Affairs 431.Google Scholar
Hayward, Tim, Political Theory and Ecological Values (Polity Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Hendry, Jennifer and Tatum, Melissa L., ‘Human Rights, Indigenous Peoples, and the Pursuit of Justice’ (2016) 34 Yale Law & Policy Review 351.Google Scholar
Hey, Ellen, ‘The Interaction between Human Rights and the Environment in the European “Aarhus Space”’ in Grear, Anna and Kotzé, Louis J. (eds), Research Handbook on Human Rights and the Environment (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015), 353376.Google Scholar
Hicks, Scott, ‘W.E.B. Du Bois, Booker T. Washington, and Richard Wright: Toward an Ecocriticism of Color’ (2006) 29:1 Callaloo 202222.Google Scholar
Hilson, Chris, ‘The Role of Narrative in Environmental Law: The Nature of Tales and Tales of Nature’ (2021) Journal of Environmental Law 124.Google Scholar
Hirokawa, Keith H. (ed), Environmental Law and Contrasting Ideas of Nature: A Constructivist Approach (Cambridge University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Hirschl, Ran, ‘The Judicialization of Politics’ in Goodin, Robert, E. (ed), The Oxford Handbook of Political Science (Oxford University Press, 2011), 253274.Google Scholar
Hobbs, Richard J. et al., ‘Managing the Whole Landscape: Historical, Hybrid, and Novel Ecosystems’ (2014) 12:10 Frontiers in Ecology and Environment 557564.Google Scholar
Hughes, Lotte, Moving the Maasai: A Colonial Misadventure (Palgrave Macmillan, 2006).Google Scholar
Humphreys, Stephen and Otomo, Yoriko, ‘Theorising International Environmental Law’ in Hoffmann, Florian and Orford, Anne (eds), The Oxford Handbook of the Theory of International Law (Oxford University Press, 2014), 797819.Google Scholar
Hunt, Lynn, Inventing Human Rights: A History (W. W. Norton and Company Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Ickes, Harold L., ‘War and Our Vanishing Resources’ (1945) 140 American Magazine 6.Google Scholar
Iovino, Serenella and Oppermann, Serpil, ‘Introduction’ in Iovino, Serenella and Oppermann, Serpil (eds), Environmental Humanities: Voices from the Anthropocene (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016), 121.Google Scholar
Iriarte, José et al., ‘Pre-Columbian Earth-Builders Settled Along the Entire Southern Rim of the Amazon’ (2018) Nature Communications 9.Google Scholar
Jackson, Zakiyyah Iman, Becoming Human: Matter and Meaning in an Antiblack World (New York University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Jacobs, Francis, ‘The Role of the European Court of Justice in the Protection of the Environment’ (2006) 18:2 Journal of Environmental Law 185205.Google Scholar
Jaque, Andrés et al. (eds), More-than-Human (Het Nieuwe Instituut, 2020).Google Scholar
Jasanoff, Sheila, ‘A World of Experts: Science and Global Environmental Constitutionalism’ (2013) 40 Environmental Affairs 439.Google Scholar
Jasanoff, Sheila, ‘What Judges Should Know about the Sociology of Science’ in Jasanoff, Sheila (ed), Science and Public Reason (Routledge, 2012).Google Scholar
Jasanoff, Sheila, ‘Heaven and Earth: The Politics of Environmental Images’ in Jasanoff, Sheila and Martello, Marybeth (eds), Earthly Politics: Local and Global in Environmental Governance (MIT Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Jasanoff, Sheila, ‘The Idiom of Co-production’ in Jasanoff, Sheila (ed), States of Knowledge: The Co-production of Science and Social Order (Routledge, 2004).Google Scholar
Johnson, Chris, Ryder, Andrew and Willers, Marc, ‘Gypsies and Travellers in the United Kingdom and Security of Tenure’ (2010) 1 Roma Rights Quarterly 4548.Google Scholar
Johnston, Barbara R., ‘Human Rights and the Environment’ (1995) 23 Human Ecology 111.Google Scholar
Kauffman, Craig M. and Martin, Pamela L., The Politics of Rights of Nature: Strategies for Building a More Sustainable Future (MIT Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Kaza, Stephanie and Kraft, Kenneth (eds), Dharma Rain: Sources of Buddhist Environmentalism (Shambhala, 2000).Google Scholar
Kennedy, David W., A World of Struggle: How Power, Law, and Expertise Shape Global Political Economy (Princeton University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Kennedy, David W., ‘Challenging Expert Rule: The Politics of Global Governance’ (2005) 27 Sydney Law Review 528.Google Scholar
Kennedy, Duncan, ‘The Critique of Rights in Critical Legal Studies’ in Brown, Wendy and Halley, Janet (eds), Left Legalism/Left Critique (Duke University Press, 2012), 178228Google Scholar
Kennedy, Duncan, A Critique of Adjudication: Fin de Siècle (Harvard University Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Kennedy, Duncan, ‘Antonio Gramsci and the Legal System’ (1982) 6:1 ALSA Forum 3237.Google Scholar
Kim, Rakhyun E. and Bosselmann, Klaus, ‘International Environmental Law in the Anthropocene: Towards a Purposive System of Multilateral Environmental Management’ (2013) 2 Transnational Environmental Law 285309.Google Scholar
Kingsbury, Benedict, ‘Indigenous Peoples, Rights and the Environment’ in Anton, Donald K. and Shelton, Dinah (eds), Environmental Protection and Human Rights (Cambridge University Press, 2011), 545665.Google Scholar
Kingsbury, Benedict, ‘Reconciling Five Competing Conceptual Structures of Indigenous Peoples’ Claims in International and Comparative Law’ in Philip, Alston (ed), Peoples’ Rights (Oxford University Press, 2008), 69110.Google Scholar
Kingsbury, Benedict, ‘The International Legal Order’ in Kane, Peter and Tushnet, Mark (eds), Oxford Handbook of Legal Studies (Oxford University Press, 2003), 271297.Google Scholar
Kirsch, Stuart, Engaged Anthropology: Politics beyond the Text (University of California Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Kiwanuka, Richard N., ‘The Meaning of “People” in the African Charter of Human and Peoples’ Rights’ (1988) 82 American Journal of International Law.Google Scholar
Klabbers, Jan, ‘The Virtues of Expertise’ in Ambrus, Monika et al. (eds), The Role of ‘Experts’ in International and European Decision-Making Processes: Advisors, Decision Makers or Irrelevant Actors? (Cambridge University Press, 2014), 82102.Google Scholar
Knox, John H., ‘Constructing the Human Right to a Healthy Environment’ (2020) 16 Annual Review of Law and Social Science 7995.Google Scholar
Knox, John H., ‘The Global Pact for the Environment: At the Crossroads of Human Rights and the Environment’ (2019) 28 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 40.Google Scholar
Knox, John H., ‘Human Rights Principles and Climate Change’ in Gray, Kevin R., Tarasofsky, Richard and Carlarne, Cinnamon (eds), The Oxford Handbook of International Climate Change Law (Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Knox, John H., ‘Linking Human Rights and Climate Change at the United Nations’ (2009) 33 Harvard Environmental Law Review 477.Google Scholar
Knox, John H., ‘The Judicial Resolution of Conflicts between Trade and the Environment’ (2004) 28 Harvard Environmental Law Review 1.Google Scholar
Knox, John H. and Pejan, Ramin (eds), The Human Right to a Healthy Environment (Cambridge University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Knox, Robert, ‘Hegemony’ in d’Aspremont, Jean and Singh, Sahib (eds), Concepts for International Law: Contributions to Disciplinary Thought (Edward Elgar, 2019), 328360.Google Scholar
Knox, Robert, ‘Strategy and Tactics’ (2010) 21 Finnish Yearbook of International Law 193230.Google Scholar
Kohler, Pia M., Science Advice and Global Environmental Governance: Expert Institutions and the Implementation of International Environmental Treaties (Anthem Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Koivurova, Timo, ‘Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights Regarding Indigenous Peoples: Retrospects and Prospects’ (2011) 18 International Journal on Minority and Groups Rights 137.Google Scholar
Kolb, Robert, Interprétation et création du droit international: esquisses d'une herméneutique juridique moderne pour le droit international public (Bruylant, 2006).Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘Sovereignty, Property, and the Locus of Power’ (2018), JHIBLOG: the blog of the Journal of the History of Ideas, at https://jhiblog.org/2018/10/17/sovereignty-property-and-the-locus-of-power-anne-schult-interviews-martti-koskenniemi-on-the-conceptual-history-of-international-law/.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘What Is International Law For?’ in Evans, Malcolm D. (ed), International Law (4th edn, Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘Hegemonic Regimes’ in Young, Margaret A. (ed), Regime Interaction in International Law: Facing Fragmentation (Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘The Effects of Rights on Political Culture’ in Koskenniemi, Martti (ed), The Politics of International Law (Hart Publishing, 2011).Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘Human Rights Mainstreaming as a Strategy for Institutional Power’ (2010) 1 Humanity, an International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism and Development 4758.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘The Fate of Public International Law: Between Techniques and Politics’ (2007) 70:1 Modern Law Review 130.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, From Apology to Utopia: The Structure of International Legal Argument (Cambridge University Press, reissue with a new epilogue, 2005).Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘International Law and Hegemony: A Reconfiguration’ (2004) 17:2 Cambridge Review of International Affairs 197218.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘What Should International Lawyers Learn from Karl Marx?’ (2004) 17:2 Leiden Journal of International Law.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, ‘Study on the Function and Scope of the lex specialis Rule and the Question of Self-contained Regimes: Preliminary Report’, ILC(LVI)/SG/FIL/CRD.1 and Add1 (United Nations, 2004).Google Scholar
Kothari, Ashish et al. (eds), ‘Recognising and Supporting Territories and Areas Conserved by Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities: Global Overview and National Case Studies’, Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, ICCA Consortium, Kalpavriksh, and Natural Justice, Montreal, Canada. Technical Series No. 64 (2012), at www.cbd.int/doc/publications/cbd-ts-64-en.pdf.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J., ‘Earth System Law for the Anthropocene: Rethinking Environmental Law Alongside the Earth System Metaphor’ (2020) 11 Transnational Legal Theory 75.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J., ‘Earth System Law for the Anthropocene’ (2019) 11:23 Sustainability 6796.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J., ‘Human Rights and the Environment in the Anthropocene’ (2014) The Anthropocene Review 1.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J., ‘Rethinking Global Environmental Law and Governance in the Anthropocene’ (2014) 32 Journal of Energy and Natural Resources Law 121.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J. and Kim, Rakhyun E., ‘Exploring the Analytical, Normative and Transformative Dimensions of Earth System Law’ (2021) Environmental Policy and Law 1.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J. and Kim, Rakhyun E., ‘Earth System Law: The Juridical Dimensions of Earth System Governance’ (2019) Earth System Governance 100003.Google Scholar
Kotzé, Louis J. and French, Duncan, ‘A Critique of the Global Pact for the Environment: A Stillborn Initiative or the Foundation for Lex Anthropocenae?’ (2018) 18:6 International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 811838.Google Scholar
Kravchenko, Svitlana and Bonine, John, Human Rights and the Environment: Cases, Law and Policy (Carolina Academic Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Kurki, Visa A. J. and Pietrzykowski, Tomasz (eds), Legal Personhood: Animals, Artificial Intelligence and the Unborn (Springer, 2017).Google Scholar
Lakoff, George, ‘Why It Matters How We Frame the Environment’ (2010) 4:1 Environmental Communication 70.Google Scholar
Latour, Bruno, ‘Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam? From Matters of Facts to Matters of Concern’ (2004) Critical Inquiry 30.Google Scholar
Lehtonen, Markku, ‘The Environmental-Social Interface of Sustainable Development: Capabilities, Social Capital, Institutions’ (2004) 49 Ecological Economics 199.Google Scholar
Lethabo King, Tiffany et al. (eds), Otherwise Worlds: Against Settler Colonialism and Anti-Blackness (Duke University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Leiter, Brian, ‘Legal Formalism and Legal Realism: What Is the Issue?’ (2010) 16 Legal Theory 111133.Google Scholar
Lenzerini, Federico and Vrdoljak, Ana Filipa (eds), International Law for Common Goods: Normative Perspectives on Human Rights, Culture and Nature (Hart Publishing, 2014).Google Scholar
Letsas, George, ‘Strasbourg’s Interpretative Ethic: Lessons for the International Lawyer’ (2010) 21:3 European Journal of International Law 509541.Google Scholar
Lewis, Simon and Maslin, Mark, The Human Planet: How We Created the Anthropocene (Yale University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Lin, Albert C., ‘Myths of Environmental Law’ (2015) Utah Law Review 4591.Google Scholar
Lippmann, Walter, The Public Philosophy (Hamish Hamilton, 1955).Google Scholar
Litowitz, Douglas, ‘Gramsci, Hegemony, and the Law’ (2000) BYU Law Review 515.Google Scholar
Liu, H.-W., ‘Harmonizing the Internal Market, or Public Health? – Revisiting Case C-491/01 (British American Tobacco) and Case C-380/03 (Tobacco advertising II)’ (2009) Columbia Journal of European Law 15.Google Scholar
Lixinski, Lucas, ‘Case of the Kaliña and Lokono Peoples v. Suriname’ (2017) 111:1 American Journal of International Law 147154.Google Scholar
Loucaides, Loukis G., ‘Reflections of a Former European Court of Human Rights Judge on His Experiences as a Judge’ (2010) 1 Roma Rights Quarterly 6169.Google Scholar
Lowe, Vaughan, ‘The Politics of Law-Making: Are the Method and Character of Norm Creation Changing?’ in Byers, Michael (ed), The Role of Law in International Politics: Essays in International Relations and International Law (Oxford University Press, 2000), 207226.Google Scholar
Lynch, Gabrielle, ‘Becoming Indigenous in the Pursuit of Justice: The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the Endorois’ (2012) 111:442 African Affairs 2445.Google Scholar
Lynch, Michael, ‘Circumscribing Expertise: Membership Categories in Courtroom Testimonies’ in Jasanoff, Sheila (ed), States of Knowledge: The Co-production of Science and the Social Order (Routledge, 2004), 161180.Google Scholar
Macekura, Stephen J., Of Limits and Growth: The Rise of Global Sustainable Development in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Mackay, Fergus, ‘The Case of the Kaliña and Lokono Peoples v. Suriname: Convergence, Divergence and Mutual Reinforcement’ (2018) 1 Erasmus Law Review 3142.Google Scholar
MacLachlan, Campbell, ‘The Principle of Systemic Integration and Article 31(3)(c) of the Vienna Convention’ (2005) 54 International and Comparative Law Quarterly 279.Google Scholar
Maffi, Luisa and Woodley, Ellen, Biocultural Diversity Conservation: A Global Sourcebook (Earthscan, 2010).Google Scholar
Malm, Andreas and Hornborg, Alf, ‘The Geology of Mankind? A Critique of the Anthropocene Narrative’ (2014) 1 The Anthropocene Review 1.Google Scholar
Malone, Linda A. and Pasternack, Scott, ‘Exercising Environmental Human Rights and Remedies in the United Nations System’ (2002–2003) 27 William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review 365.Google Scholar
Maloney, Michelle and Burdon, Peter (eds), Wild Law – In Practice (Routledge, 2014).Google Scholar
Marín Durán, Gracia and Morgera, Elisa, ‘Commentary on Article 37 of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights – Environmental Protection’ (2013) Europa Working Paper No. 2013/2.Google Scholar
Martin, Mathilde and Islar, Mine, ‘The “End of the World” vs. the “End of the Month”: Understanding Social Resistance to Sustainability Transition Agendas, A Lesson from the Yellow Vests in France’ (2021) 16 Sustainability Science 601614.Google Scholar
Martinez, Dennis, ‘Indigenous Peoples and the Western Idea of Nature’ (2003) 21 Ecological Restoration 4.Google Scholar
Matthews, Daniel, Earthbound: The Aesthetics of Sovereignty in the Anthropocene (Edinburgh University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Matthews, Daniel, ‘Law and Aesthetics in the Anthropocene: From the Rights of Nature to the Aesthesis of Obligations’ (2019) Law, Culture and the Humanities 1.Google Scholar
Matz-Lück, Nele, ‘Promoting the Unity of International Law: Standard-Setting by International Tribunals’ in König, Doris et al. (eds), International Law Today: New Challenges and the Need for Reform? (Springer, 2008), 99121.Google Scholar
Matz-Lück, Nele, ‘Harmonization, Systemic Integration, and Mutual Supportiveness as Conflict-Solution Techniques’ (2006) 17 Finnish Yearbook of International Law 3953.Google Scholar
May, James R. and Daly, Erin (eds), Human Rights and the Environment: Legality, Indivisibility, Dignity and Geography (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2019).Google Scholar
McCrudden, Christopher, ‘Mainstreaming Human Rights’ in Harvey, Colin (ed), Human Rights in the Community: Rights as Agents for Change (Hart Publishing, 2005), 928.Google Scholar
McHarg, Aileen, ‘Reconciling Human Rights and the Public Interest: Conceptual Problems and Doctrinal Uncertainty in the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights’ (1999) 62 The Modern Law Review 5.Google Scholar
Meadows, Donella H. et al., The Limits to Growth (Universe Books 1972).Google Scholar
Medina, Laurie Kroshus, ‘The Production of Indigenous Land Rights: Judicial Decisions across National, Regional, and Global Scales’ (2016) 39 Political and Legal Anthropology Review 1.Google Scholar
Merchant, Carolyn, Reinventing Eden: The Fate of Nature in Western Culture (Routledge, 2004).Google Scholar
Merrills, John G., ‘Environmental Rights’ in Brunnée, Jutta, Bodansky, Daniel and Hey, Ellen (eds), The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law (Oxford University Press, 2007), 664680.Google Scholar
Michaels, David, ‘Manufactured Uncertainty: Contested Science and the Protection of the Public’s Health and Environment’ in Proctor, Robert N. and Schiebinger, Londa (eds), Agnotology: The Making and Unmaking of Ignorance (Stanford University Press, 2008), 90107.Google Scholar
Mickelson, Karin, ‘The Stockholm Conference and the Creation of the South-North Divide in International Environmental Law and Policy’ in Alam, Shawkat et al. (eds), International Environmental Law and the Global South (Cambridge University Press, 2015) 115117.Google Scholar
Miglietti, Sara, ‘Between Nature and Culture: The Integrated Ecology of Renaissance Climate Theories’ in Pauline, Goul and Phillip, John Usher (eds), Early Modern Écologies: Beyond English Ecocriticism (Amsterdam University Press, 2020) 137.Google Scholar
Mikhail, Alan, ‘Enlightenment Anthropocene’ (2016) 49:2 Eighteenth-Century Studies 211.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Audra and Chaudhury, Aadita, ‘Worlding beyond “the” “End” of “the World”: White Apocalyptic Visions and BIPOC Futurisms’ (2020) 34:3 International Relations 309.Google Scholar
Monani, Salma and Adamson, Joni (eds), Ecocriticism and Indigenous Studies: Conversations from Earth to Cosmos (Routledge, 2016).Google Scholar
Montini, Massimiliano, ‘The Rise of “Internal Environmental Conflicts” within the Green Economy’ (2015) 24 The Italian Yearbook of International Law 95.Google Scholar
Moore, Jason W. (ed), ‘The Capitalocene, Part I: On the Nature and Origins of Our Ecological Crisis’ (2017) 44 The Journal of Peasant Studies 3.Google Scholar
Moore, Jason W. (ed), Anthropocene or Capitalocene? Nature, History, and the Crisis of Capitalism (PM Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Morgan-Foster, Jason, ‘What Islamic Law Can Teach the International Human Rights Movement’ (2014) 8 Yale Human Rights and Development Journal 1.Google Scholar
Morgera, Elisa, ‘Under the Radar: Fair and Equitable Benefit-Sharing and the Human Rights of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities Related to Natural Resources’ (2019) The International Journal of Human Rights.Google Scholar
Morgera, Elisa, ‘The Need for an International Legal Concept of Fair and Equitable Benefit Sharing’ (2016) 27 European Journal of International Law 2.Google Scholar
Morgera, Elisa, ‘Corporate Accountability’ in Morgera, Elisa and Kulovesi, Kati (eds) Research Handbook on International Law and Natural Resources (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2016).Google Scholar
Morgera, Elisa, Corporate Accountability in International Environmental Law (Oxford University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Moyn, Samuel, Human Rights and the Uses of History (Verso, 2014).Google Scholar
Natarajan, Usha, ‘TWAIL and the Environment: The State of Nature, the Nature of the State, and the Arab Spring’ (2012) 14:1 Oregon Review of International Law 177.Google Scholar
Natarajan, Usha and Khoday, Kishan, ‘Environment’ in Jean, d’Aspremont and John, Haskell (eds), Tipping Points in International Law: Commitment and Critique (Cambridge University Press, 2021), 132–148.Google Scholar
Natarajan, Usha and Khoday, Kishan, ‘Locating Nature: Making and Unmaking International Law’ (2014) 27:3 Leiden Journal of International Law 573593.Google Scholar
Neumann, Roderick P., Imposing Wilderness: Struggles over Livelihood and Nature Preservation in Africa (University of California Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Nichols, Robert, Theft Is Property! Dispossession and Critical Theory (Duke University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Nicholson, Edward M., The Environmental Revolution: A Guide for the New Masters of the World (Hodder and Stoughton, 1970).Google Scholar
Nicholson, Matthew, ‘Psychoanalyzing International Law(yers)’ (2017) 18:3 German Law Journal 441510.Google Scholar
Nifosi-Sutton, Ingrid, The Protection of Vulnerable Groups under International Human Rights Law (Routledge, 2017).Google Scholar
Nollkaemper, André, ‘Framing Elephant Extinction’, 3 ESIL 6 (2014), at www.esil-sedi.eu/node/643.Google Scholar
Norman, Jana, Posthuman Legal Subjectivity: Reimagining the Human in the Anthropocene (Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
Nyhan, Emma, ‘International Law in Transit: The Concept of “Indigenous Peoples” and Its Transitions in International, National and Local Realms — the Example of the Bedouin in the Negev’ in August, Reinisch, Mary E., Footer and Christina, Binder (eds), International Law and … Select Proceedings of the European Society of International Law (Hart, 2016), 289308.Google Scholar
Nyhan, Emma, ‘Translating Global Indigeneity into the Bedouin Vernacular’ (2021) 12:3 Transnational Legal Theory 415441.Google Scholar
O’Gorman, Roderic, ‘The Case for Enshrining a Right to Environment within EU Law’ (2013) 19:3 European Public Law 583604.Google Scholar
Okely, Judith, The Traveller-Gypsies (Cambridge University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Otis, Ghislain and Laurent, Aurélie, ‘Indigenous Land Claims in Europe: The European Court of Human Rights and the Decolonization of Property’ (2013) 4:2 Arctic Review on Law and Politics 156180.Google Scholar
Pahuja, Sundhya, ‘Conserving the World’s Resources?’ in Crawford, James and Koskenniemi, Martti (eds), The Cambridge Companion to International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Pahuja, Sundhya, Decolonising International Law: Development, Economic Growth and the Politics of Universality (Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Pasqualucci, Jo M., ‘The Right to a Dignified Life (Vida Digna): The Integration of Economic and Social Rights with Civil and Political Rights in the Inter-American Human Rights System’ (2008) 31 Hastings International and Comparative Law Review 1.Google Scholar
Pauwelyn, Joost, Conflicts of Norms in Public International Law: How WTO Rules Relate to Other Rules of International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Pauwelyn, Joost and Michaels, Ralf, ‘Conflict of Norms or Conflict of Laws? Different Techniques in the Fragmentation of Public International Law’ (2012) 22 Duke Journal of International and Comparative Law.Google Scholar
Pederson, Ole, ‘An International Environmental Court and International Legalism’ (2012) 24 Journal of Environmental Law 547558.Google Scholar
Peel, Jacqueline, ‘Giving the Public a Voice in the Protection of the Global Environment: Avenues for Participation by NGOs in Dispute Resolution at the European Court of Justice and World Trade Organization’ (2001) 12 Colorado Journal of Environmental Law 47.Google Scholar
Pelloux, Robert, ‘Vrais et Faux Droits de l’Homme: Problèmes de Définition et de Classification’ (1981) Revue de Droit Public.Google Scholar
Pepper, Angie, ‘Adapting to Climate Change: What We Owe to Other Animals’ (2019) 36 Journal of Applied Philosophy 592.Google Scholar
Perlman, Cary R. (ed), Environmental Litigation: Law and Strategy (American Bar Association, 2009).Google Scholar
Peroni, Lourdes and Timmer, Alexandra, ‘Vulnerable Groups: The Promise of an Emerging Concept in European Human Rights Convention Law’ (2013) 11:4 International Journal of Constitutional Law 10561085.Google Scholar
Peters, Anne, ‘Compensatory Constitutionalism: The Function and Potential of Fundamental International Norms and Structures’ (2006) 19 Leiden Journal of International Law 579.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Response-Abilities of Care in More-than-Human Worlds’ (2021) 12:1 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 102124.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘“I Wish There Was a Treaty We Could Sign”: An Inquiry into the Making of the Global Pact for the Environment’ (2021) 28:2 Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 780.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Contested Indigeneity and Traditionality in Environmental Litigation: The Politics of Expertise in Regional Human Rights Courts’ (2021) 21:1 Human Rights Law Review 132156.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Is Climate Change a Human Rights Violation? Abandoning the Rights Ethos: Facing Climate Change as a Collective Duty’ in Hulme, Mike (ed), Contemporary Debates about Climate Change: A Student Primer (Routledge, 2019).Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘When Environmental Protection and Human Rights Collide: Four Heuristics of Conflict Resolution’ in Voigt, Christina (ed), International Judicial Practice on the Environment: Questions of Legitimacy (Cambridge University Press, 2019), 239261.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Rights and Expertise: Assessing the CJEU’s Managerial Approach to Conflict Adjudication’ in Baetens, Freya (ed), The Legitimacy of Unseen Actors in International Adjudication (Cambridge University Press, 2019), 297319.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Narcissus’ Reflection in the Lake: Untold Narratives in Environmental Law beyond the Anthropocentric Frame’ (2018) 30:2 Journal of Environmental Law, 235259.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘The Integration of Environmental Protection Considerations within the Human Rights Law Regime: Which Solutions Have Been Provided by Regional Human Rights Courts?’ (2015) 24 Italian Yearbook of International Law 191.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, ‘Conflicts between Environmental Protection and Human Rights’ in May, James R. and Daly, Erin (eds), Human Rights and the Environment: Legality, Indivisibility, Dignity and Geography (Edward Elgar, 2019), 288299.Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine, Les Sources du Droit à l’Eau en Droit International (Editions Johanet, 2013).Google Scholar
Petersmann, Marie-Catherine and Berti Suman, Anna, ‘Citizen Sensing and Ontopolitics in the Anthropocene: Engaging with Covid-19 and Climate Change’ in Milan, Stefania, Treré, Emiliano and Masiero, Silvia (eds), COVID-19 from the Margins: Pandemic Invisibilities, Policies and Resistance in the Datafied Society (Institute of Network Cultures), 225240.Google Scholar
Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas, ‘Critical Environmental Law in the Anthropocene’ in Kotzé, Louis J. (ed), Environmental Law and Governance for the Anthropocene (Hart Publishing, 2017).Google Scholar
Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas, Spatial Justice: Body, Lawscape, Atmosphere (Routledge, 2014).Google Scholar
Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas, ‘Actors or Spectators? Vulnerability and Critical Environmental Law’ (2013) 3 Oñati Socio-Legal Series 5.Google Scholar
Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas, ‘Towards a Critical Environmental Law’ in Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas (ed), Law and Ecology: New Environmental Foundations (Routledge, 2011).Google Scholar
Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas, ‘Spatial Justice: Law and the Geography of Withdrawal’ (2010) 6 International Journal of Law in Context 3.Google Scholar
Picolotti, Romina and Taillant, Jorge D. (eds), Linking Human Rights and the Environment (University of Arizona Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Plater, Zygmunt J. B., ‘From the Beginning, a Fundamental Shift of Paradigms: A Theory and Short History of Environmental Law’ (1994) Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 27.Google Scholar
Porras, Ileana, ‘Appropriating Nature: Commerce, Property, and the Commodification of Nature in the Law of Nations’ (2014) 27:3 Leiden Journal of International Law 641660.Google Scholar
Porter, Libby, ‘Possessory Politics and the Conceit of Procedure: Exposing the Cost of Rights under Conditions of Dispossession’ (2014) 13 Planning Theory 387.Google Scholar
Posner, Eric A., ‘Climate Change and International Human Rights Litigation: A Critical Appraisal’ (2007) 155 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1925.Google Scholar
Postiglione, Amedeo, Global Environmental Governance: The Need for an International Environmental Agency and an International Court of the Environment (Bruylant, 2010).Google Scholar
Pottage, Alain, ‘Perspectives on Environmental Law and the Law Relating to Sustainability: A Continuing Role for Ecofeminism’ in Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Andreas (ed), Law and Ecology: New Environmental Foundations (Routledge, 2011).Google Scholar
Povinelli, Elizabeth A., The Cunning of Recognition: Indigenous Alterities and the Making of Australian Multiculturalism (Duke University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Prieur, Michel, ‘The Human Right to Landscape’ in May, James R. and Daly, Erin (eds), Human Rights and the Environment: Legality, Indivisibility, Dignity and Geography (Edward Elgar, 2019).Google Scholar
Proctor, Robert and Schiebinger, Londa, Agnotology: The Making and Unmaking of Ignorance (Stanford University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Provost, René and Sheppard, Colleen, ‘Human Rights through Legal Pluralism’ in Provost, René and Sheppard, Colleen (eds), Dialogues on Human Rights and Legal Pluralism (Springer, 2013).Google Scholar
Purdy, Jedediah, After Nature: A Politics for the Anthropocene (Harvard University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Raftopoulos, Malayna, ‘REDD and Human Rights: Addressing the Urgent Need for a Full Community Based Human Rights Impact Assessment’ (2016) 20 International Journal of Human Rights 4.Google Scholar
Rajan, S. Ravi, ‘Classical Environmentalism and Environmental Human Rights: An Exploration of their Ontological Origins and Differences’ (2011) 2:1 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 106121.Google Scholar
Ranganathan, Surabhi, ‘Ocean Floor Grab: International Law and the Making of an Extractive Imaginary’ (2019) 30:2 European Journal of International Law 573.Google Scholar
Ranganathan, Surabhi, ‘Global Commons’ (2016) 27 European Journal of International Law 3.Google Scholar
Rao, Malavika, ‘A TWAIL Perspective on Loss and Damage from Climate Change: Reflections from Indira Gandhi’s Speech at Stockholm’ (2022) 12 Asian Journal of International Law 6381.Google Scholar
Rasulov, Akbar, ‘From Apology to Utopia and the Inner Life of International Law’ (2016) 29 Leiden Journal of International Law 641666.Google Scholar
Redclift, Michael, ‘Sustainable Development (1987–2005): An Oxymoron Comes of Age’ (2005) 12 Sustainable Development 212227.Google Scholar
Redford, Kent H., ‘The Ecologically Noble Savage’ (1991) 15:1 Cultural Survival Quarterly 4648.Google Scholar
Renteln, Alison Dundes, ‘Environmental Rights vs. Cultural Rights’ (2004) 2 Human Rights Dialogue 11.Google Scholar
Richardson, Benjamin J., The Art of Environmental Law: Governing with Aesthetics (Hart, 2019).Google Scholar
Richardson, Benjamin J., ‘Doing Time: The Temporalities of Environmental Law’ in Kotzé, Louis J. (ed), Environmental Law and Governance for the Anthropocene (Hart, 2017).Google Scholar
Richardson, Benjamin J., Barritt, Emily and Bowman, Megan, ‘Beauty: A Lingua Franca for Environmental Law?’ (2019) 8 Transnational Environmental Law 1.Google Scholar
Rietig, Katharina, ‘“Neutral” Experts? How Input of Scientific Expertise Matters in International Environmental Negotiations’ (2014) 47 Policy Sciences 2.Google Scholar
Roos, Jerome, ‘The Gilets Jaunes Have Blown Up the Old Political Categories’, ROAR Magazine (2018), at https://popularresistance.org/the-gilets-jaunes-have-blown-up-the-old-political-categories/.Google Scholar
Ross, Anne et al., Indigenous Peoples and the Collaborative Stewardship of Nature: Knowledge Binds and Institutional Conflicts (Routledge, 2011).Google Scholar
Ross, Eric, ‘The Malthus Factor: Poverty, Politics and Population in Capitalist Development’ (2000) 20 CornerHouse Briefing 1.Google Scholar
Rühs, Nathalie, ‘The Implementation of Earth Jurisprudence through Substantive Constitutional Rights of Nature’ (2016) 8 Sustainability 2.Google Scholar
Russell, Edmund, War and Nature: Fighting Humans and Insects with Chemicals from World War I to Silent Spring (Cambridge University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Ryder, Stacia et al. (eds), Environmental Justice in the Anthropocene: From (Un)Just Presents to Just Futures (Routledge, 2021).Google Scholar
Saab, Anne, Narratives of Hunger in International Law: Feeding the World in Times of Climate Change (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Saito, Yuriko, Aesthetics of the Familiar: Everyday Life and World-Making (Oxford University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Saito, Yuriko, Everyday Aesthetics (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Sajeva, Giulia, When Rights Embrace Responsibilities: Biocultural Rights and the Conservation of Environment (Oxford University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Sajeva, Giulia, ‘Rights with Limits: Biocultural Rights, Between Self-Determination and Conservation of the Environment’ (2015) 6:1 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 3054.Google Scholar
Sand, Peter H. (ed), The History and Origin of International Environmental Law (Edward Elgar Publishing 2015).Google Scholar
Sand, Peter H. (ed), ‘The Evolution of International Environmental Law’ in Brunnée, Jutta, Bodansky, Daniel and Hey, Ellen (eds), The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Sandholtz, Wayne, Prohibiting Plunder: How Norms Change (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Sands, Philippe, ‘Reflections on International Judicialization’ (2016) 27 European Journal of International Law 4.Google Scholar
Sands, Philippe, ‘Climate Change and the Rule of Law: Adjudicating the Future in International Law’ (2016) 28 Journal of Environmental Law 1935.Google Scholar
Sands, Philippe, ‘Litigating Environmental Disputes: Courts, Tribunals and the Progressive Development of International Environmental Law’ in Ndiaye, Tafsir Malick and Wolfrum, Rüdiger (eds), Law of the Sea, Environmental Law and Settlement of Disputes: Liber Amicorum of Judge Thomas A. Mensah (Martinus Nijhoff, 2007).Google Scholar
Sapignoli, Maria, ‘“Bushmen” in the Law: Evidence and Identity in Botswana’s High Court’ (2017) 40:2 Political and Legal Anthropology Review 210225.Google Scholar
Savaresi, Annalisa, ‘The UN HRC Recognizes the Right to a Healthy Environment and Appoints a New Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Climate Change. What Does It All Mean?’ (EJIL:Talk!, 12 October 2021), at www.ejiltalk.org/the-un-hrc-recognizes-the-right-to-a-healthy-environment-and-appoints-a-new-special-rapporteur-on-human-rights-and-climate-change-what-does-it-all-mean.Google Scholar
Schall, Christian, ‘Public Interest Litigation Concerning Environmental Matters before Human Rights Courts: A Promising Future Concept?’ (2008) 20:3 Journal of Environmental Law 417453.Google Scholar
Schama, Simon, Landscape and Memory (Alfred A. Knopf, 1995).Google Scholar
Schlosberg, David, Defining Environmental Justice: Theories, Movements, and Nature (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Scholtz, Werner (ed), Animal Welfare and International Environmental Law: From Conservation to Compassion (Edward Elgar, 2019).Google Scholar
Schulz, Karsten A., ‘Decolonising Political Ecology: Ontology, Technology and “Critical” Enchantment’ (2017) 24 Journal of Political Ecology 126.Google Scholar
Scott, Joanne and Sturm, Susan, ‘Courts as Catalysts: Rethinking the Judicial Role in New Governance’ (2007) 12 Columbia Journal of European Law 565594.Google Scholar
Seck, Sara L., ‘Relational Law and the Reimagining of Tools for Environmental and Climate Justice’ (2019) 31 Canadian Journal of Women and the Law 151177.Google Scholar
Sellheim, Nikolas, ‘The Right Not to Be Indigenous: Seal Utilization in Newfoundland’ (2014) Arctic Yearbook.Google Scholar
Selman, Paul, ‘On the Meaning of Natural Beauty in Landscape Legislation’ (2010) 35 Landscape Research 1.Google Scholar
Selin, Henrik and Linnér, Björn-Ola, ‘From Species Protection to Environment and Development’ in The Quest for Global Sustainability: International Efforts on Linking Environment and Development (Cambridge: Science, Environment and Development Group, Center for International Development, Harvard University, 2005).Google Scholar
Seyfang, Gill, ‘Environmental Mega-Conferences – From Stockholm to Johannesburg and Beyond’ (2003) 13 Global Environmental Change 3.Google Scholar
Shany, Yuval, ‘No Longer a Weak Department of Power? Reflections on the Emergence of a New International Judiciary’ (2009) 20 European Journal of International Law 7391.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Performance of Regional Human Rights Courts’ in Squatrito, Theresa et al. (eds), The Performance of International Courts and Tribunals (Cambridge University Press, 2018), 114153.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Benefits and Limitations of a Human Rights Approach to Environmental Protection’ (2014) Hungarian Yearbook of International Law and European Law.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Symposium: The Pope’s Encyclical and Climate Change Policy – Dominion and Stewardship’ (2015) AJIL Unbound.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Legitimate and Necessary: Adjudicating Human Rights Violations Related to Activities Causing Environmental Harm or Risk’ (2015) 6:2 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 139155.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Resolving Conflicts between Human Rights and Environmental Protection: Is There a Hierarchy?’ in de Wet, Erika and Vidmar, Jure (eds), Hierarchy in International Law: The Place of Human Rights (Oxford University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Human Rights and the Environment: What Specific Environmental Rights Have Been Recognised?’ (2006) 35 Denver Journal of International Law and Policy 129.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Environmental Rights’ in Alston, Philip (ed), Peoples’ Rights (Oxford University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah (ed), Commitment and Compliance: The Role of Non-binding Norms in the International Legal System (Oxford University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘What Happened in Rio to Human Rights?’ (1993) 3 The Yearbook of International Environmental Law 75.Google Scholar
Shelton, Dinah, ‘Human Rights, Environmental Rights, and the Right to Environment’ (1991) 28 Stanford Journal of International Law 103.Google Scholar
Simma, Bruno, From Bilateralism to Community Interest in International Law (Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law, Volume 250, 1994).Google Scholar
Singer, Peter, Animal Liberation: A New Ethics for Our Treatment of Animals (HarperCollins, 1975).Google Scholar
Singh, Julietta, Unthinking Mastery: Dehumanism and Decolonial Entanglements (Duke University Press, 2018)Google Scholar
Steffen, Will, Crutzen, Paul J. and McNeill, John R., ‘The Anthropocene: Are Humans Now Overwhelming the Great Forces of Nature?’ (2007) 36 AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment 8.Google Scholar
Stevens, Stan (ed), Indigenous Peoples, National Parks and Protected Areas: A New Paradigm Linking Conservation, Culture and Rights (University of Arizona Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Stevens, Stan (ed), ‘Implementing the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and International Human Rights Law through the Recognition of ICCAs’ (2010) 17 Policy Matters 181194.Google Scholar
Stevens, Stan (ed), ‘The Legacy of Yellowstone’ in Stevens, Stan (ed), Conservation through Cultural Survival: Indigenous Peoples and Protected Areas (Island Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Stoett, Peter J., ‘Of Whales and People: Normative Theory, Symbolism and the IWC’ (2005) 8 Journal of Wildlife Law and Policy 151175.Google Scholar
Stone Sweet, Alec and Mathews, Jud, ‘Proportionality Balancing and Global Constitutionalism’ (2008) Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 74165.Google Scholar
Stone, Christopher D., ‘Ethics and International Environmental Law’ in Brunnée, Jutta, Bodansky, Daniel and Hey, Ellen (eds), The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Stone, Christopher D., ‘Should Trees Have Standing? Toward Legal Rights for Natural Objects’ (1972) 45 Southern California Law Review 450.Google Scholar
Stoppioni, Edoardo, Le droit non écrit dans le contentieux international économique: Une analyse critique de discours (Brill, 2021).Google Scholar
Suárez-Krabbe, Julia, Race, Rights and Rebels: Alternatives to Human Rights and Development from the Global South (Rowman and Littlefield, 2015).Google Scholar
Sulyok, Katalin, Science and Judicial Reasoning: The Legitimacy of International Environmental Adjudication (Cambridge University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Swyngedouw, Eric, ‘Impossible “Sustainability” and the Post-Political Condition’ in Krueger, Rob and Gibbs, David (eds), The Sustainable Development Paradox (Guilford Press, 2007) 13.Google Scholar
Sykes, Katie, Animal Welfare and International Trade Law: The Impact of the WTO Seal Case (Edward Elgar, 2021).Google Scholar
Szalai, Aniko, ‘Minorities, Indigenous, Roma – Introductory Remarks and Definitions’ in Protection of the Roma Community under International and European Law (Eleven International, 2015), 113.Google Scholar
Takacs, David, ‘The Public Trust Doctrine, Environmental Human Rights and the Future of Private Property’ (2008) 16 NYU Environmental Law Journal 711.Google Scholar
Tănăsescu, Mihnea, ‘Rights of Nature, Legal Personality, and Indigenous Philosophies’ (2020) 9:3 Transnational Environmental Law 429.Google Scholar
Tehan, Maureen F. et al., The Impact of Climate Change Mitigation on Indigenous and Forest Communities: International, National and Local Law Perspectives on REDD+ (Cambridge University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Theriault, Sophie, ‘The Food Security of the Inuit in Times of Change: Alleviating the Tension between Conserving Biodiversity and Access to Food’ (2011) 2 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 2.Google Scholar
Thin, Sarah, ‘Community Interest and the International Public Legal Order’ (2021) 68 Netherlands International Law Review 3559.Google Scholar
Thornes, Tobias, ‘Animals and Climate Change’ (2016) 6:1 Journal of Animal Ethics 81.Google Scholar
Townsend, Dina Lupin, ‘Silencing, Consultation and Indigenous Descriptions of the World’ (2019) 10:2 Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 193214.Google Scholar
Treves, Tullio et al. (eds), Non-Compliance Procedures and Mechanisms and the Effectiveness of International Environmental Agreements (T.M.C. Asser Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Tsosie, Rebecca, ‘Indigenous Peoples, Anthropology, and the Legacy of Epistemic Injustice’ in Ian, James Kidd, José, Medina and Gaile, Pohlhaus (eds), The Routledge Handbook of Epistemic Injustice (Routledge, 2017), 356369.Google Scholar
Tsosie, Rebecca, ‘Tribal Environmental Policy in an Era of Self-Determination: The Role of Ethics, Economics and Traditional Ecological Knowledge’ (1996) 21:1 Vermont Law Review 225334.Google Scholar
Tucker, Mary E. and Williams Duncan, R. (eds), Buddhism and Ecology: The Interconnection of Dharma and Deeds (Harvard University Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Tully, Stephen, ‘International Environmental Law and Sustainable Development’ in Tully, Stephen (ed) International Corporate Legal Responsibility (Kluwer Law International, 2012).Google Scholar
Turner, Stephen J., Shelton, Dinah L., Razzaque, Jona, McIntyre, Owen and May, James R. (eds), Environmental Rights: The Development of Standards (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Turnhout, Esther, Tuinstra, Willemijn and Halffman, Willem, Environmental Expertise: Connecting Science, Policy and Society (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Tzouvala, Ntina, Capitalism as Civilisation: A History of International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Untermaïer, Jean, ‘Droit de l’Homme à l’Environnement et Libertés Publiques: Droit individuel ou droit collectif. Droit pour l'individu ou obligation pour l'Etat’ (1978) 4 Revue Juridique de l’Environnement 329367.Google Scholar
Urbina, Francisco J., A Critique of Proportionality and Balancing (Cambridge University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Usher, Phillip J., Exterranean: Extraction in the Humanist Anthropocene (Fordham University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
van Aaken, Anne, ‘Defragmentation of Public International Law through Interpretation: A Methodological Proposal’ (2009) 16 Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 483.Google Scholar
Van den Eynde, Laura, ‘An Empirical Look at the Amicus Curiae Practice of Human Rights NGOs before the European Court of Human Rights’ (2013) 31:3 Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights 271313.Google Scholar
Veit, Peter G. and Benson, Catherine, ‘When Parks and People Collide’ (2004) 2 Human Rights Dialogue 13.Google Scholar
Venzke, Ingo, ‘Semantic Authority’ in Jean, d’Aspremont and Sahib, Singh (eds), Concepts for International Law: Contributions to Disciplinary Thought (Edward Elgar, 2019), 815826.Google Scholar
Venzke, Ingo, ‘Is Interpretation in International Law a Game?’ in Andrea, Bianchi, Daniel, Peat and Matthew, Windsor (eds), Interpretation in International Law (Oxford University Press, 2015), 352370.Google Scholar
Venzke, Ingo, ‘Semantic Authority, Legal Change and the Dynamics of International Law’ (2015) 12 No Foundations 1.Google Scholar
Venzke, Ingo, How Interpretation Makes International Law: On Semantic Change and Normative Twists (Oxford University Press 2012).Google Scholar
Venzke, Ingo, ‘Legal Contestation about “Enemy Combatants”: On the Exercise of Power in Legal Interpretation’ (2009) 5 Journal of International Law and International Relations 155.Google Scholar
Vermeylen, Saskia, ‘Materiality and the Ontological Turn in the Anthropocene: Establishing a Dialogue between Law, Anthropology and Eco-Philosophy’ in Kotzé, Louis J. (ed), Environmental Law and Governance for the Anthropocene (Hart Publishing, 2017), 137162.Google Scholar
Vidas, Davor, Zalasiewicz, Jan and Williams, Mark, ‘What Is the Anthropocene – and Why Is It Relevant for International Law?’ (2015) 25:1 Yearbook of International Environmental Law 3.Google Scholar
Vidas, Davor et al., ‘International Law for the Anthropocene? Shifting Perspectives in Regulation of the Oceans, Environment and Genetic Resources’ (2015) 9:1 Anthropocene 13.Google Scholar
Viñuales, Jorge E., ‘The Rise and Fall of Sustainable Development’ (2013) 22 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 313.Google Scholar
Viñuales, Jorge E., Foreign Investment and the Environment in International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Vogt, William, Road to Survival (Sloane Associates, 1948).Google Scholar
Voigt, Christina (ed), International Judicial Practice on the Environment (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Voigt, Christina and Makuch, Zen (eds), Courts and the Environment (Edward Elgar, 2018).Google Scholar
von Bogdandy, Armin and Venzke, Ingo, ‘The Spell of Precedents: Law Making by International Courts and Tribunals’ in Cesare, Romano, Karen, Alter and Yuval, Shany (eds), The Oxford Handbook of International Adjudication (Oxford University Press, 2013), 503522.Google Scholar
von Bogdandy, Armin and Venzke, Ingo, ‘Beyond Dispute: International Judicial Institutions as Lawmakers’ in Armin, von Bogdandy and Ingo, Venzke (eds), International Judicial Lawmaking on Public Authority and Democratic Legitimation in Global Governance (Springer, 2012).Google Scholar
von Bogdandy, Armin and Venzke, Ingo (eds), ‘Beyond Dispute: International Judicial Institutions as Lawmakers’ (2011) 12 German Law Journal 9791370.Google Scholar
Waibel, Michael, ‘Interpretive Communities in International Law’ in Andrea, Bianchi, Daniel, Peat and Matthew, Windsor (eds), Interpretation in International Law (Oxford University Press, 2015), 147165.Google Scholar
Wainwright, Joel and Bryan, Joe, ‘Cartography, Territory, Property: Postcolonial Reflections on Indigenous Counter-Mapping in Nicaragua and Belize’ (2009) 16:2 Cultural Geographies 153178.Google Scholar
Warnock, Mary, Critical Reflections on Ownership (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015).Google Scholar
Warren, Karen J., Ecofeminist Philosophy: A Western Perspective on What It Is and Why It Matters (Rowman & Littlefield, 2000).Google Scholar
Watts, Vanessa, ‘Indigenous Place-Thought and Agency amongst Humans and Non-humans (First Woman and Sky Woman go on a European World Tour!)’ (2013) 2:1 Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education and Society 2034.Google Scholar
Webber, Grégoire C. N., ‘Proportionality, Balancing and the Cult of Constitutional Rights Scholarship’ (2010) 23:1 Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 179202.Google Scholar
Weimer, Maria and de Ruijter, Anniek (eds), Regulating Risks in the European Union: The Co-production of Expert and Executive Power (Hart Publishing, 2017).Google Scholar
Werner, Wouter G. (ed), Deference in International Courts and Tribunals: Standard of Review and Margin of Appreciation (Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Werner, Wouter G. (ed), ‘The Politics of Expertise: Applying Paradoxes of Scientific Expertise to International Law’ in Ambrus, Monika et al. (eds), The Role of ‘Experts’ in International and European Decision-Making Processes: Advisors, Decision Makers or Irrelevant Actors? (Cambridge University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Westra, Laura, Human Rights: The Common and the Collective (UBC Press, 2011).Google Scholar
White, Lynn, ‘The Historical Roots of Our Ecological Crisis’ (1967) 155 Science 12031207.Google Scholar
Willers, Marc, ‘Climate Change Litigation in European Regional Courts: Jumping Procedural Hurdles to Hold States to Account?’ in Ivano, Alogna, Christine, Bakker and Jean-Pierre, Gauci (eds), Climate Change Litigation: Global Perspectives (Brill, 2021), 294309.Google Scholar
Williams, Eric, Capitalism and Slavery (University of North Carolina Press, 1944).Google Scholar
Wills, Joe, Contesting World Order? Socioeconomic Rights and Global Justice Movements (Cambridge University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Wolfe, Patrick, Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology: The Politics and Poetics of an Ethnographic Event (Cassel, 1999).Google Scholar
Wolfrum, Rüdiger and Matz, Nele, Conflicts in International Environmental Law (Springer, 2003).Google Scholar
Wolloch, Nathaniel, History and Nature in the Enlightenment: Praise of the Mastery of Nature in Eighteenth-Century Historical Literature (Routledge, 2016).Google Scholar
WoodJr., Harold W., ‘The United Nations World Charter for Nature: The Developing Nations’ Initiative to Establish Protections for the Environment’ (1985) 12 Ecology Law Quarterly 4.Google Scholar
Woods, Kerri, ‘Environmental Human Rights’ in Gabrielson, Teena, Hall, Cheryl, Meyer, John M. and Schlosberg, David (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Environmental Political Theory (Oxford University Press, 2016), 333345Google Scholar
Wulf, Andrea, The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World (Alfred A. Knopf, 2015).Google Scholar
Young, Margaret A., ‘Fragmentation’ in Rajamani, Lavanya and Peel, Jacqueline (eds), Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law (2nd edn, Oxford University Press, 2021), 85101.Google Scholar
Young, Margaret A., ‘Global Pact for the Environment: Defragging International Law?’, EJIL: Talk! (2018), at www.ejiltalk.org/global-pact-for-the-environment-defragging-international-law/.Google Scholar
Young, Margaret A. (ed), Regime Interaction in International Law: Facing Fragmentation (Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Young, Margaret A., Trading Fish, Saving Fish: The Interaction between Regimes in International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Yusoff, Kathryn, A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None (University of Minnesota Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Zarbiyev, Fuad, Le discours interprétatif en droit international contemporain: Un essai critique (Bruylant, 2015).Google Scholar
Zarsky, L. (ed), Human Rights and the Environment: Conflicts and Norms in a Globalizing World (Earthscan, 2002).Google Scholar
Zemanek, Karl, ‘New Trends in the Enforcement of Erga Omnes Obligations’ (2000) 4:1 Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law 152.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Marie-Catherine Petersmann, Universiteit van Tilburg, The Netherlands
  • Book: When Environmental Protection and Human Rights Collide
  • Online publication: 20 October 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009026659.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Marie-Catherine Petersmann, Universiteit van Tilburg, The Netherlands
  • Book: When Environmental Protection and Human Rights Collide
  • Online publication: 20 October 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009026659.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Marie-Catherine Petersmann, Universiteit van Tilburg, The Netherlands
  • Book: When Environmental Protection and Human Rights Collide
  • Online publication: 20 October 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009026659.011
Available formats
×