1. Introduction
In June 2021, the Independent Expert Panel (IEP) for the Legal Definition of Ecocide, a civil society initiative, put forward a definition of ecocide, calling for state parties to the International Criminal Court (ICC) to adopt the definition and incorporate the novel crime into the Rome Statute.Footnote 1 Supporters of the initiative have argued that the proposed Article 8ter represents the ‘culmination of years of progress on pushing legal imagination to contemplate the crime of ecocide’ and it comes at a time when state support for the recognition of international criminalization of environmental destruction has increased.Footnote 2 A large number of countries, both in the Global North and South, have expressed support for the idea of adding a new crime of ecocide to the international legal framework.Footnote 3 While we understand the sense of urgency and frustration following decades of inaction behind the calls for more forceful responses to the ecological ‘crisis’, this article questions the broader implications of codifying ecocide in international law adopting a political economic analysis. The faith in the capacity of international criminal law (ICL) to ‘contribute to a change of consciousness, in support of a new direction, one that enhances the protection of the environment and supports a more collaborative and effective legal framework for our common future on a shared planet’Footnote 4 deserves, we argue, further scrutiny especially given the crisis of legitimacy and mounting critiques levelled against the ICL project.Footnote 5 Faced with declining support from their constituencies, the incorporation of a ‘new’ crime of ecocide could give new purpose to these institutions.Footnote 6 Indeed, a more sceptical reader could see in the debate on the codification of ecocide in the ICC Statute (and on the creation of a special tribunal to address the war against Ukraine) efforts to reinvigorate the project, to make it ‘fashionable’ again.Footnote 7 The broader objective of this contribution is thereby to start a reflective conversation on the turn to coercive tools, in this case ICL, as means of ‘protecting’ nature – a debate that we hope will be further expanded and continued well beyond the life of this article.Footnote 8
The IEP’s definition of the crime of ecocide has attracted sizeable attention in international law and scholarship. Commentators have pointed out the possibilities, as well as the shortcomings of the proposed definition, notably concerning the mental element of the crime,Footnote 9 the distinction between lawful and unlawful acts that harm the environment,Footnote 10 and the inherent ‘anthropocentric’ nature of Article 8ter (particularly, in relation to the ‘wanton’ nature of the conduct).Footnote 11 As such, the majority of present debates take an ‘internal’ perspective on ICL,Footnote 12 often starting from the premise that the codification of an international crime proscribing ecocide would be a good – although imperfect – solution to address the current ecological crisis.Footnote 13
Our analysis acknowledges, but also departs from, the doctrinal limitations of the IEP’s definition of ecocide, focusing instead on situating the ‘new’ crime within the broader discipline and practice of international law. This article is thereby written in reaction to two trends and discursive strategies that we have noticed within dominant legal approaches to ecocide. The first is the prevalent and conventional argument in favour of expanding the reach of the law (in this case, ICL) to tackle the ecological catastrophe. The second is the lack of attention to the interactions (and possible tensions) between different sub-fields of international law when it comes to questions of global environmental governance.
Reflecting on the first issue, efforts to codify the crime of ecocide and to expand the reach of international law over environmental injustices represent the epitome of a problem-solving approach, which conceives of law as external to society and as a corrective to its evils. This reinforces the view that international law is only relevant if it can contribute to accountability – read ‘punishment’ – or the constraining of action.Footnote 14 Thinking in these terms about the law is reductive. International law enables and facilitates as much as it constrains. Further, the law is not ‘an objective force that exists out “there”, impacting neutrally on society, economy and polity, but is in “here”, both constituting and constituted by social, economic and political forces’.Footnote 15
In understanding international law as embedded in the ‘fine materiality of everyday life’,Footnote 16 we build upon a thriving body of scholarship that works to expose the interrelation of law and global political economic dynamics.Footnote 17 This literature has drawn attention to the role of international law in producing and distributing wealth and resources, thereby illuminating the law’s complicities with the structural injustices of modern capitalism.Footnote 18 While arguably not always engaging with the discipline of political economy adequately,Footnote 19 this literature seeks to overcome the artificial separation between law (public and private), economic life, and political contestation by paying attention to historic and systemic tendencies.Footnote 20 In doing so, scholars build upon a variety of critical legal approaches, such as post/decolonial, feminist, and Marxist critiques of international law – the latter having seen a renaissance in the last two decades.Footnote 21 Some of these analyses have outlined how, despite their emancipatory aims, ICL and human rights law are tools for political economic governance, determining the boundaries of who has access to resources, knowledge, life opportunities, and who does not.Footnote 22 Along the same lines, in this article, we employ a political economic approach to illustrate how the technical, acontextual, and ahistorical frames that permeate mainstream legal debates on ecocide work to narrow down conceptualizations of what justice is and can be, while obscuring the complicity of the law in co-producing a world of multiple, entangled crises.Footnote 23 The political economic approach we adopt to analyse the proposed crime of ecocide therefore draws on the literature referenced above, seeking to unpack the interrelations between international law and political economy, including the role both play in the organization of power and the distribution of resources.
Our second concern is the lack of attention to the interactions (and possible tensions) between different sub-fields of international law when it comes to questions of global environmental governance.Footnote 24 To our best knowledge, no scholar has analysed the turn to ICL to protect nature from a broader disciplinary perspective. As such, debates in other sub-fields of international law have rarely featured into discussions on the proposal to codify ecocide.Footnote 25 In this article we therefore seek to fill this gap through our shared sense that silos thinking is not only unhelpful but can actually be counterproductive when dealing with ecological collapse. As historians and critical scholars have shown, the separation of humanity and nature is the product of European modernist thinking, which paved the way for domination, appropriation, and efforts to master the non-human world through reason.Footnote 26 Present international law, fragmented into specialized sub-fields and technocratic institutions, is part of the same modernist project.Footnote 27 In times of entangled ‘crises’, raising inequalities, and violence, the normative implications of separating the rules and institutions governing humanity, ecology, and the economy deserve more attention. Thus, this article moves from a different starting point to much of the literature analysing ecocide so far, situating the movement to criminalize environmental protection within broader theoretical trends within international law. It draws on critical ICL scholarship alongside examples from international environmental law, business and human rights and ongoing debates on the regulation of deep-sea mining. In doing so, this article intends to contribute to existing debates by both providing a generalist international legal analysis of ecocide and by situating calls for a ‘new’ crime of ecocide within the political economic structure of international law.
We begin, in Section 2, by locating efforts to codify ecocide within wider debates on the political economy of ICL. We argue that an approach that takes material conditions seriously helps us see what is made visible and what becomes invisible by criminalizing environmental destruction. Through a focus on the spectacular,Footnote 28 ICL marginalizes the ‘slow violence’Footnote 29 of extractivism, neocolonialism, and their racial and gender hierarchies. Related to this is the critique of ICL as a depoliticizing and ahistorical tool to manage the entangled socio-ecological ‘crises’ of modernity. Situating ecocide within the history of American imperialism and the politics of the Vietnam War helps make visible the tension between earlier calls to preserve nature and today’s technocratic response based on simple criminality/legality binaries. This allows us to contest ICL’s progress narrative and its promise to offer a ‘solution’ to a meta-problem, which in its complexity, cannot just be fixed, nor delimited to a sub-field of practice – and arguably not even to a ‘discipline’.
In Section 3, we situate efforts to codify the ‘new’ crime of ecocide within the broader framework of international law and environmental governance. Together with Natarajan and Khoday, we contend that nature should not be confined to a disciplinary specialization because ‘humanity’s relationship with nature has been central to making international law’.Footnote 30 As noted, while existing reflections on ecocide have emanated largely from within the ICL community, in this section we argue that to understand the dangerous work (or the ‘imbroglio’) of a new crime of ecocide, we need to locate the trend towards the criminalization of environmental destruction within general discussions on how international law frames the relationship between economic development and environmental protection. Here we build upon the critical literature on sustainable development while drawing on examples from deep-sea mining regulation and business and human rights to show that the codification of ecocide reproduces a similar rationale: it seeks to reconcile ecological preservation and devastation while failing to challenge the violent structures of extractive capitalism and its racialized, classed, and gendered hierarchies.Footnote 31
In engaging critically with efforts to codify ecocide in the ICC Statute, we recognize that the concept has been also used by social movements in more emancipatory and subversive ways, for instance through efforts like the Monsanto Tribunal.Footnote 32 These articulations of ecocide ‘from below’ frame ecological and social justice as interdependent and mutually reinforcing, and a central theme has been the link between ecological destruction and its destructive impacts on humans whose existence is dependent on functional ecosystems (notably, Indigenous communities).Footnote 33 According to these radical views, an international crime of ecocide can:
… formulate a vital starting-point for larger processes of decolonisation by both delivering a counterhegemonic legal logic that may reach structural and systemic drivers of violence, and by enabling decolonial narratives of justice to utilise international law as another tool against the institutions and structures of power that legitimise ecocide.Footnote 34
While recognizing the instrumental value that the concept of ecocide may have in advancing the political struggles of marginalized and subaltern groups, in this article, we interrogate the capacity of the international legal system to challenge (and dismantle) the complex structures of power that legitimize acts of ecocide. Further, we commence a reflection (that certainly deserves to be continued) on what happens when emancipatory projects supported by grass-roots social movement begin to be taken up and, in turn, co-opted by international institutions or experts speaking on behalf of the international community.Footnote 35 Our analysis is thereby not an attack on the vitally important work that has been done by many civil society and local actors on ecocide. Rather, it is an invitation to ponder on the effects that the codification of ecocide in international law may produce, including on the political struggle for environmental, racial, indigenous, and gender justice.Footnote 36
2. Codifying ecocide as an international crime: The political economy of (in)visibility
Over the past few decades, ICL has become a dominant frame for defining issues of global justice, often accompanied by a faith in the many qualities of international prosecution, from deterrence and ‘ending impunity’, to redress for victims, peacebuilding, and even reconciliation.Footnote 37 Yet, in more recent years, a body of critical scholarship has emerged that highlights how the advancement and use of ICL often narrows the field of possible response to mass violence, delegitimizing alternative approachesFootnote 38 and privileging a view of justice that dwells heavily in the symbolic order.Footnote 39 In reaction to the often abstract and romanticized views that permeate this field, critical scholars have started to foreground the material conditions and political economic interests that underpin the project and the practice of ICL.Footnote 40 In so doing, recent research has shown how global justice actors have embraced a commodified,Footnote 41 or marketizedFootnote 42 version of justice.Footnote 43
One defining feature of this model of justice is the emphasis on the most visible and sensational forms of atrocities to capture the audience’s attention, together with the employment of marketing strategies to ‘sell’ the ICL project, through documentaries, exhibitions or promotional materials.Footnote 44 This development, which should be understood, according to Schwöbel-Patel, as part of the emergence of the attention economy and branding practices, has two constitutive functions. On the one side, it serves an ordering function, ‘introducing hierarchies of what is worthy of attention’. On the other, it promotes a simplified understanding of events, upholding binary understandings of ‘good’ and ‘evil’.Footnote 45
The concept of marketized or commodified global justice is helpful to understand current efforts to incorporate the crime of ecocide into the Rome Statute. Not only has Stop Ecocide International, the NGO behind the movement to make ecocide an international crime, run a proper advertising campaign to promote the project,Footnote 46 but the very choice of the word ‘ecocide’ indicates the desire for attention that characterizes ICL practices. Illuminating is the following statement made by Sands, one of the IEP members, during an interview with Al Jazeera:
Interestingly if you call it an “environmental crime against humanity” no one cares but if you call it “ecocide” people sit up and say “oh yes that is very important”. We have done some polling about this in the context of the expert panel. We are taking Lemkin’s magical word and giving it the machinery articulated by Lauterpacht.Footnote 47
No doubt, the choice of words matters for ICL, as certain words have the capacity to trigger specific emotional reactions.Footnote 48 As put by Schwöbel-Patel, when ‘[t]he cause is framed as spectacle … the response must be spectacular too’.Footnote 49
Thinking about the spectacles justice is useful to see how power operates through spectacle and law.Footnote 50 Clarke has compellingly argued that spectacles of justice operate to ‘reinforce the apparent power of the rule of law to affirm guilt or innocence and to individualize the violence of many and redirect it onto one individual’.Footnote 51 Further, Clarke continues, ‘these spectacles work together with spectacular capitalism to produce an economy of appearances, that is, the way economies work through different spectacles to camouflage particular economic processes’.Footnote 52 In short, as other critical legal scholars have also argued, spectacles of criminal justice, including international criminal trials, through their focus on individual perpetrators and specific episodes of injustices, work to displace the harder social, political, and economic questions at play.Footnote 53 ICL trials thereby distort the search for the ‘truth’ about past atrocities (despite the ‘truth’ often being seen as a justification for these international trials in the first place).Footnote 54 In particular, the turn to ICL creates the illusion that, by punishing a few bad actors, centuries of oppression based on race, class, and gender can be addressed, thus relieving pressure on the state (and the international community) to attend to the structural issues of distribution that, in many instances, played a key role in fostering violence and conflict in the first place.Footnote 55
When applied to ecological issues, the limitations of an approach that prioritizes the ‘extraordinary’ over the ‘everyday’,Footnote 56 and ‘episodic’ over the ‘structural’Footnote 57 is even more acute. While the implications of thinking about the spectacles of international criminal law are broader, let us consider for a moment the definition of ecocide put forward by the IEP:
For the purpose of this Statute, “ecocide” means unlawful or wanton acts committed with knowledge that there is a substantial likelihood of severe and either widespread or long-term damage to the environment being caused by those acts.Footnote 58
Clearly, by using terms such as ‘severe’, ‘widespread’, and ‘long-term’, the emphasis here is on the most visible and sensational forms of ecological harms that can be attributed to an individual acting with ‘knowledge’. Nixon’s concept of ‘slow violence’ is helpful to reflect, a contrario, on what we may call the political economy of (in)visibily. By ‘slow violence’, Nixon indicates forms of violence associated with climate change, deforestation, toxic dumping, and the environmental aftermath of war, that take place gradually and often invisibly.Footnote 59 The violence associated with these phenomena, he contends, is ‘neither spectacular nor instantaneous, but rather incremental and accretive, its calamitous repercussions playing out across a range of temporal scales’.Footnote 60 Nixon observes that the casualties of slow violence are ‘most likely not to be seen, not to be counted’ as they take years or decades to occur.Footnote 61 He adds that the ‘insidious workings of slow violence derive largely from the unequal attention given to spectacular and unspectacular time’.Footnote 62
As a legal field built around the liberal notions of individual agency, intention, quantifiable harms, and their proximate cause, ICL appears of limited value when it comes to providing meaningful responses to diffuse, unspectacular, ordinary environmental violence.Footnote 63 By punishing a handful individuals for ‘severe and either widespread or long-term’ environmental damage, ICL would leave unscrutinized the routine workings of prevailing economic structures – one can think of land degradation, resource dispossession, toxic pollution caused by extractivist projects in different parts of the Global South – and, therefore, perversely ends up legitimizing them. This, of course, brings to the fore the role of transnational corporations, which will be further addressed in Section 4.
Moreover, contemporary appeals to mobilize ICL in response to pressing environmental issues risks obscuring, and thus normalizing, inequalities that are tied to deeply-rooted injustices, including the disproportionate ecological burden that is and has long been experienced by racially marginalized communities in the Global South.Footnote 64 After all, as scholars have shown, colonialism was about the exploitation of people and their natural resources.Footnote 65 Environmental justice movements and scholars have long called attention to how pollution and environmental destruction affect the poor and ethnically marginalized segments of the society in unequal waysFootnote 66 or, to put it differently, have reminded us ‘that people’s experiences of “nature” are shaped by their experiences of social, economic, and political inequalities’.Footnote 67 Over the years, theories and practices of environmental justice have taken an international dimension and become a critical framework to challenge North-South environmental relations, the legacy of colonialism and exploitation, and to emphasize how ‘issues of ecology are often interlinked with questions of human rights, ethnicity and distributive justice’. Footnote 68 One can think of the North’s ecological debt to the South for centuries of colonial expansion and military interventions, or for the accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, at least since the industrial revolution.Footnote 69
The criminalization of ‘severe and either widespread or long-term damage to the environment’, as proposed in the current definition of ecocide, moves from the assumption that it is possible to separate today’s responsibility for the most severe forms of environmental destruction from their historical and material conditions. Through its focus on the most visible environmental externalities, the proposed definition of ecocide masks the mundane neo(colonial) practices of resource extraction and land grabs by transnational corporate actors (often headquartered in the Global North).Footnote 70
It is thus important to situate the proposed new crime of ecocide within the histories and continuation of colonial practices, as these practices are intimately tied to different environmental injustices. This is even more important given that critical legal scholars have shown how the ICL project has not only been silent on colonial power dynamics but has actually reproduced colonial and racial legaciesFootnote 71 by reinforcing problematic assumptions about the Global South as a place of disorder, backwardness, and lawlessness needing external interventions, including in the form of international criminal trials ending the local ‘culture of impunity’.Footnote 72 While it may be too early to say, the dangers of employing the same ‘civilizing’ discourse in relation to the entangled socio-ecological crises are not to be taken lightly. Although, according to its supporters, ‘a law of ecocide on the horizon will therefore signal the end of corporate immunity – and begin to redirect business and finance away from seriously harmful practices’,Footnote 73 a few questions come to mind. Will the codification of ecocide be just a ‘signal’ (i.e., be a marketing device) or will it help address the responsibility of transnational corporations for the exploitation and dispossession inflicted upon the poorest communities? Will ‘weak’ states in the Global South, once again, be blamed for their failure to regulate such actors and protect their populations’ environmental rights?
A familiar response to these critiques, and one which has been used to dismiss critical scholarship in ICL more broadly, is that the incorporation of the crime of ecocide into the ICC Statute is just one (imperfect) ‘tool’ to provide some forms of accountability for environmental harms.Footnote 74 Indeed, even the most enthusiastic supporters of the ICL project nowadays tend to recognize the defects of the system.Footnote 75 A few commentators have taken a more prudent stand and acknowledged the internal limitations of ICL in addressing the structural dimensions of the ecological crisis.Footnote 76 Yet, often associated with this response to criticism is the insistence that the work of the ICC is law and not politics.Footnote 77 While this presumption has been subject to multiple critiques by scholars in critical legal studiesFootnote 78 and critical international law alike,Footnote 79 the separation between the ‘political’ and the ‘legal’ is arguably enacted by mainstream international criminal lawyers.Footnote 80
In order to illuminate – and thus contest – the politics involved in criminalizing ecological harm,Footnote 81 it may be useful to take a few steps back and briefly look at the origins of the term ‘ecocide’. Paying attention to the original invocations of ‘ecocide’, we suggest, tells a completely different story of the interplay of law, politics, and economy in matters of global environmental justice.Footnote 82
The concept of ecocide appears to have been first used in 1970 by Arthur Galston, an American biologist, to characterize the ‘willful, permanent destruction of environments in which people can live in a manner of their choosing’.Footnote 83 At the War Crimes and the American Conscience conference, held in 1970, Galston condemned the US Operation Ranch Hand in Vietnam and asked the international community, through the United Nations, to come together against ecocide, just as the world did after the Second World War against genocide and crimes against humanity.Footnote 84 Galston’s usage of the term should be understood as part of the strong antiwar activist movement that drew attention to the commission of war crimes in Vietnam. Falk subsequently developed this set of ideas and framed them in legal terms in his 1973 publication, Environmental Warfare, Facts, Appraisal and Proposals. In it, Falk called for the drafting of new instruments, namely an International Convention on the Crime of Ecocide and a Draft Protocol on Environmental Warfare. He argued that such normative agenda had gained momentum and that:
[t]he Indochina context, given the public outrage over the desecration of the land at a time of rising environmental consciousness, creates a target of opportunity comparable to Nuremberg. Surely it is no exaggeration to consider the forests and plantations treated by Agent Orange as an Auschwitz for environmental values, certainly not from the perspective of such a distinct environmental species as the mangrove tree or nipa palm. And just as the Genocide Convention came along to formalize part of what has already been condemned and punished at Nuremberg, so an Ecocide Convention could help carry forward into the future a legal condemnation of environmental warfare in Indochina.Footnote 85
ICL commentators tend to underline the continuity between early calls to address the human and ecological impacts of ‘environmental warfare’ in Vietnam and contemporary efforts to codify the crime of ‘ecocide’. As such, they see in the proposed Article 8ter the ‘culmination of years of progress on pushing legal imagination to contemplate the crime of ecocide’.Footnote 86 There are, however, palpable differences between the two types of engagement with the criminality of ecological destruction. One could argue that they move from entirely different assumptions about violence, nature-human relationship, and the role of international legal arguments.
As pointed out by Modirzadeh in her comparison of the Vietnam war era and contemporary War on Terror scholarships, there has been a seismic shift in less than two generations in ‘tone, approach, mood, force of feeling, and, ultimately, connection with the reader’.Footnote 87 When one reads Falk’s analysis of the deleterious effects of US environmental warfare in Vietnam, his writing communicates ‘angst, shame, anger, poignancy, a visceral sense of the stakes, and it creates an appreciation on the part of the reader for why this is all very personal for the author’.Footnote 88 Rather than adopting a ‘view from nowhere’,Footnote 89 his scholarship is imbued with the politics of the time; his examination of the laws of armed conflict cannot be separated from his strong opposition against the Vietnam war.Footnote 90 Context and background play a significant role in his discussion of international law proscribing or authorizing the different military techniques employed by the US in Vietnam, notably the massive use of chemical herbicides, such as the infamous Agent Orange. Ultimately, although Falk’s work still displays some optimism about the capacity of international law to evolve in new directions to account for the damage inflicted upon the environment, its analysis is never a romanticized ‘celebration of the law itself’;Footnote 91 rather, it is a grounded and honest inquiry into the role of law and its real-world implications. Indeed, both Falk and Galston sought to challenge the traditional logic of the laws of armed conflict, in which nature was treated as enemy property to be destroyed in the pursuit of military objectives, and which failed to appreciate the interdependence of humans and the ‘environment’ before, during and after armed conflict.Footnote 92
Present day legal and policy debates on ecocide often look ‘out of time’, tending to concentrate primarily on technical matters and less on the politics involved in regulating the ‘environment’ through ICL. Questions of inequality, coloniality, and discrimination associated with structural patterns of environmental degradation rarely feature in contemporary legalistic invocations of the term ‘ecocide’. The historical and continued Eurocentric alliances of the discipline of international law, including the specific sub-field of ICL, which frames nature as commodity, object, or property to be exploited, frames which we outline in more detail in the following section, are never acknowledged.Footnote 93 The use of abstract language and hypotheticals adds a sense of disconnection and distance with the daily struggles of communities in the Global South, which experience the worst effects of the unfolding ecological ‘crisis’. As such, the concept of ecocide, voided of its critical and subversive edge, becomes nothing more than a marketing tool to promote a particular vision of global justice.Footnote 94
While we do not argue for a revival of affective style advocacy against ecocide, as during the Vietnam War, what we do suggest is that paying attention to the de-politicizing properties of dominant uptakes of ecocide enables us to problematize the tendency of the field to develop progress narratives that erase the material interests underpinning the criminalization of ecological harm.Footnote 95 The framing of the discussion as apolitical elides the impact of economic dynamics on ‘underdeveloped’ regions that are exploited for their natural resources and allows for a response based on simple criminality/legality binaries.Footnote 96 As Tallgren presciently argued, ICL becomes a project:
to naturalise, to exclude from the political battle, certain phenomena which are in fact the preconditions for the maintenance of the existing governance; by the North, by wealthy states, by wealthy individuals, by strong states, by strong individuals, by men, especially white men, and so forth.Footnote 97
The next section will further expand upon this point and turn to Marxist and other critiques of international law to consider how the codification of ecocide operates as a governance tool to silence the structural economic conditions that enabled (and enable) the current ecological breakdown. In doing so, it will build upon debates in other sub-fields of international law, namely international environmental law, the law of the sea, and business and human rights, drawing attention to some biases (and ‘oxymorons’) implicit in the proposed definition of ecocide.
3. The attempt to reconcile economic development and environmental protection through the codification of ecocide
The previous section examined how the logic of marketization has permeated ICL, highlighting the depoliticizing effects this logic produces on responses to deeply-rooted injustices – in particular, ecological injustices. The problem is, of course, not unique to ICL. As noted above, there is a rich intellectual tradition in international law showing how the field is permeated with and structured by capitalist ideologies, identifying these structures as central in creating and perpetuating global inequalities:Footnote 98 so much so that Chimni has argued that today’s global political economy should be deemed a form of ‘global imperialism’.Footnote 99 Considering how international law defines and regulates nature is necessary in order to analyse in more details how a crime of ecocide may operate within and as part of the wider political economic structure of international law.
In discussing the relationship between nature and capital, Marxist international lawyers have showed that international law is structured around wealth accumulation, noting that this accumulation depends upon ‘the exploitation and dispossession inflicted upon domestic working classes and colonial territories’.Footnote 100 As Marx himself noted, the dominant mode of labour is the central knot that mediates our relationship with nature.Footnote 101 Thus, the way we structure, contextualize, and execute the labour which supplies both the material existence and excessive wealth of human societies decides how we shape ‘social metabolism’.Footnote 102 The latter term indicates the ‘process by which peoples take nutrient matter and energy from their environments, digest, and give back in return’.Footnote 103 This means:
that human production or appropriation of wealth is mutually constituted by social relations and the contents and constraints of natural conditions … [including that these natural conditions] are … affected by human agency according to the particular forms of social interaction or social relations … imposed on nature.Footnote 104
Marxist and other critical legal scholars have showed that these (unequal) interactions and relations are legally constituted.Footnote 105
A central element that is exposed when looking at the way capitalism operates through and in international law, is the deeply material nature of the law and how the law situates the particular (white male) human in hierarchical priority over the non-human environment. These hierarchical patterns evoke what Moore calls ‘the Capitalocene’. In Capitalism in the Web of Life, Moore illustrates how capitalism perpetuates, and is dependent upon, the society-nature dichotomy. Moore writes that ‘capitalism does not have an ecological regime; it is an ecological regime’.Footnote 106 Moore understands capitalism as implicated in conceptualizing nature as a ‘cheap’ resource for generating profit, as well as divisions in class, gender, and race. Likewise, Haraway has pointed out the hierarchical ordering within the category of the ‘human’ and described capitalism’s role in the objectification of the environment and the non-human animal for profit.Footnote 107
Critical legal scholars have explored how law, colonialism, and the capitalist domination of nature and non-human beings have long been intertwined: rapid industrialization under colonialism worked in assemblage with racism and other imposed hierarchies to ensure that Europe made a profit at the expense of peoples and their environments.Footnote 108 Adding another layer of analysis, Gonzalez uses the concept of ‘racial capitalism’ to think through the relationship between the law, environmental degradation, racial subordination, and the capitalist world economy.Footnote 109
The problems of centring (certain) human, and particularly economic interests, in international law can be seen when examining one of the core principles of international environmental law: sustainable development.Footnote 110 This principle, described by Humphreys and Otomo as ‘the über-principle’ of international environmental law,Footnote 111 is made up of several components, including the general need to exploit resources in a manner that is ‘sustainable’, the necessity of preserving resources for future generations, the equitable use of resources between states, and the need to consider economic and development plans and objectives.Footnote 112 Originally a principle put partially in place to balance the economic differences between states, the balance between sustainability and economic and development objectives is supposed to be struck in a way that ensures that states, and especially states with stronger development needs, can continue to draw on their natural resourcesFootnote 113 (though the principle also has a longer and darker colonial history).Footnote 114 The principle purports that economic growth, human development, and environmental protection can coexist.Footnote 115 To put it differently, the mainstream version of the principleFootnote 116 seeks, in Escobar’s words, to ‘mediate’ between nature and capital or ecology and economy.Footnote 117 But can ecological values and economic interests be reconciled? What purposes does this reconciliation serve? According to Escobar, this reconciliation is intended to give the impression that only minor corrections to the capitalist market economy need to be implemented in order to ‘launch an era of environmentally sound development’.Footnote 118 By effectively managing natural resources and environmental externalities (particularly in the Global South) it becomes possible to continue with the current development model. At the end, Escobar poignantly concludes that it is economic growth that is ‘sustained’ by ‘sustainable development’, not the environment.Footnote 119
It is nowadays becoming increasingly clear that sustainable development may be impossible while capitalistic economic growth remains embedded within the principle itself.Footnote 120 Similarly, contemporary discourses of ‘green growth’ or ‘green economy’ – and the adoption of market solutions to environmental problems, notably climate change – illustrate the same dynamics and faith in capitalism to solve the problems it created. Yet, as scholars and social movements have pointed out, CDM, REDD+ and other carbon trading scheme supported by the climate change regime allow the rich to pay the poor to take environmentally responsible actions on their behalf so that the rich can maintain their high-consumerist, carbon-intensive lifestyles.Footnote 121
This point brings to the fore another contradiction within the dominant sustainable development discourse. While sustainable development seeks, in part, to account for economic imbalances (many of which are the result of colonialism and the ways in which European powers profited, and continue to profit from, the extraction of resources from the places they once colonized) it does not speak specifically about Global North/South inequalities.Footnote 122 As Natarajan and Khoday note, while sustainable development seeks to challenge ideas of pure economic growth, it is seldom used ‘to call for less development’ on the part of those who have disproportionately enriched themselves.Footnote 123 Taking this argument further, they contend that the concept of sustainable development, in the end, ensures that the status quo remains, helping to ‘naturalize and obfuscate the process whereby some people systemically under-develop others’, resulting in the continued deepening of global inequalities.Footnote 124
If we agree that international law has contributed to a specific understanding of ‘nature’ as resource to be appropriated and exploited to ensure continued economic growth, it is important to then situate current debates on ecocide within international law’s histories and disciplinary trends. As noted through the above analysis of the principle of sustainable development, international environmental law has sought to place human economic development and environmental protection alongside one another, suggesting that these two spheres can coexist. While multiple scholars and social movements have challenged this position,Footnote 125 these insights rarely feature in contemporary international law debates on ecocide.Footnote 126 We argue that these perspectives are relevant and should be brought into conversation with current efforts to expand the reach of ICL over environmental destruction.
In doing so, we agree with Lindgren that:
ecological destruction is a structurally reoccurring phenomenon embedded in the economic logics that buttress modern industrial societies … [and] international law fails to address this destruction because it is based on an epistemological foundation which does not recognise the structural and institutional violence in acts of ecocide.Footnote 127
But there is more to it. By reproducing an artificial distinction between the ‘economy’ and ‘ecology’, and threating those as separate ‘spheres’ with distinct rules and rationales,Footnote 128 international law is creating the conditions for ecocide to occur.
To further substantiate this critique, it is useful to go back to the definition of ecocide proposed by the IEP. This definition of ecocide introduces a distinction between ‘unlawful’ and ‘wanton’ acts which are likely to result in ‘ecocide’.Footnote 129 While the meaning of ‘unlawful’ is intuitive, ‘wanton’ is defined as ‘reckless disregard for damage which would be clearly excessive in relation to the social and economic benefits anticipated’.Footnote 130 A cost-benefit analysis is thus required for the act to be qualified as ‘wanton’. But how to compare the ‘anticipated’ socio-economic utility and environmental harm? What is the reference point to assess the social and economic benefit? Or to put it differently, who is benefitting from it? And who is suffering for the ‘disproportionate’ environmental damage? Voigt, one of the authors of the definition, commented that the wantonness cost-benefit analysis applies only to lawful acts that involve a substantial likelihood of causing either widespread or long-term severe environmental damage. In other words, the requirement of reckless disregard for the disproportionate environmental damage (i.e., ‘wanton’) applies to lawful acts only. In this situation, disregard of excessiveness of the damage is the ‘criminalizing’ factor. The alternative would have been, according to Voigt, to capture illegal acts onlyFootnote 131 – which would have substantially limited the scope of the criminal provision.
Heller has criticized the distinction between lawful and unlawful acts resulting in ecocide, pointing out that it would likely require a problematic assessment of the ‘legality’ of the act under national law.Footnote 132 In his view, such distinction should have been avoided. Robinson, on the contrary, explains how the distinction between lawful and unlawful acts, which is common in international environmental law and domestic law, is not only legally sound, but justifiable given the complexities of ‘modern life’ and global supply chains. He offers some examples of activities (e.g., producing and distributing food, manufacturing computers, and other electronic devices) that may foreseeably cause widespread, long-term, and severe ecological harm and ‘yet they may be socially valuable, environmentally responsible, legally, and ethically appropriate’.Footnote 133
The scholarly debate on the distinction between ‘lawful’ and ‘unlawful’ and the definition of ‘wanton’ acts is particularly interesting for our purposes, as it underscores how international (criminal) law attempts to mediate between the need to ‘protect’ nature, on the one side, and to exploit and gain social and economic benefits from it, on the other. In this sense, by reproducing a similar rationale, the proposed definition of ecocide can be read very much in line with the existing normative values that underpin international environmental law, including the ‘uber’ principle of sustainable development.Footnote 134 As Humphreys and Otomo have noted, ‘the destruction (exploitation/transformation) and “conservation” of nature turn out to be mutually constitutive processes’.Footnote 135 What they observe regarding IEL can apply to ICL as well, namely that ‘this body of law can appear improbably elastic, providing a framework for the ongoing (if occasionally attenuated) destruction and commodification of natural phenomena in a language of care and protection’.Footnote 136
To think about the tension between environmental protection and destruction/commodification as incorporated in the proposed definition of ecocide, many useful examples can be drawn on. One such example is the regulation of deep-sea mining (DSM). While several organizations, and some states, have called for a moratorium on DSM,Footnote 137 arguing that the environmental impacts will be vast and are, due to the under-explored nature of this environment, still largely unknown,Footnote 138 discussions to draft a mining code, which will legally authorize DSM, are currently underway at the International Seabed Authority (ISA). This mining code is supposed to be drafted in the next few years, with the Republic of Nauru having triggered the two-year process for negotiations in June 2021 through its submission of an intention to mine to the ISA.Footnote 139 While debates on the mining code will likely have to be conducted well beyond the two-year period before an agreed draft will be submitted, despite controversies and discontent, DSM is on track to be legally authorized within the next decade.
DSM is an interesting example that can be used to think through the proposed definition of ecocide for two reasons. First, the fact that DSM is likely to be legally authorized in the near future is used by Stop Ecocide International as an example of why the ‘new’ crime is needed.Footnote 140 However, and second, this example actually allows us to explore further the limitations of the proposed definition and its focus on ‘unlawful’ and ‘wanton’ acts. DSM, if legally authorized through a mining code, would clearly not be unlawful. However, whether DSM would be a ‘wanton’ act, that is an act committed with, ‘reckless disregard for damage which would be clearly excessive in relation to the social and economic benefits anticipated’,Footnote 141 very much depends on one’s perspective. While, on the one hand, proponents of DSM argue that the metals and minerals to be mined will be essential for the ‘green’ transition (e.g., for making electric car batteries), others, primarily environmental movements and scientists, argue that the environmental destruction that will be caused to vast areas of the globe strongly outweighs justifications to mine.Footnote 142 Given the controversial nature of DSM and the political stakes involved in its regulation, would an international (criminal) judge be better placed to strike a balance between the potential social-economic gains of DSM with unknown biodiversity loss, habitat destruction, and high pollution risks?
A similar tendency to reconcile opposing values (the ‘sacred’ and the ‘profane’)Footnote 143 can be observed within the field of business and human rights. Current critiques of the business and human rights discourse are, in our view, helpful to reflect on the merits of the proposal to codify ecocide. One of the justifications for the codification of the crime of ecocide is that it will (at least in the intentions of the drafters) tackle both corporate and state accountability for the new crime, with the vast majority of the types of events that the proposed crime may capture, such as oil spills and severe water pollution, occurring at the hands of corporations. As known, the field of business and human rights seeks to promote the upholding of human rights by corporate actors. Scholars and practitioners in this field draw on instruments such as the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights – the international guidelines on preventing, addressing and remedying human rights abuses committed through business operations,Footnote 144 to call for corporations to respect human rights standards. Under the existing business and human rights framework, due diligence has emerged as the preferred tool to promote greater corporate accountability for human rights violations that may arise from business activities abroad. The standard is now incorporated into different instruments, notably the UN Guiding Principles, mentioned above, Footnote 145 and the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. Footnote 146
Despite the proliferation of these instruments, the question as to whether corporate human rights standards can achieve meaningful outcomes for the affected communities has been raised by critical scholars. Corporations still commit human rights abuses all over the world, often with impunity: from the mass pollution caused by oil companies to cost cutting at the Rana Plaza garment factory in Bangladesh which led to a fire and the subsequent death of 1,135 people in 2013.Footnote 147 Thus, while instruments like the UN Guiding Principles can be used to occasionally temper the worst of these human rights abuses, they do little more than temper. Counterintuitively, as put by Baars, such normative frames help legitimize the existence and actions of corporations, with corporations often using the language of human rights and corporate social responsibility to claim ethical credentials with largely limited real world impacts.Footnote 148
A similar concern can be raised when thinking specifically about criminal law responses to corporate ‘impunity’.Footnote 149 Considering the biases of dominant legal discourse and praxis, once placed within the broader political economic context,Footnote 150 criminal law efforts to ‘hold corporations accountable’ for their abuses are increasingly criticized in the literature.Footnote 151 Baars, for example, argues that the perverse effect of the availability of accountability mechanisms, including under criminal law, works to transform the relationship of responsibility for harm from a relationship between affected communities or society at large, to one between individual victims and the corporation. The consequence is that individuals affected by the particular excesses of capitalism are constituted as victims who, in a legal relationship as formal equals with the corporation, can seek to negotiate the ‘price’ of the harm done to them, under the commodified responsibility relationship.Footnote 152 Such an understanding of justice as quantifiable in financial terms works to silence and render invisible alternative forms of justice that may, in fact, be less about money and more about human relationships to one another, their environments and the world they live in.Footnote 153 Further, Baars shows that the perverse effect of the availability of accountability mechanisms, including under criminal law means that legal efforts to make corporate actors accountable contribute to legitimize the ‘normal’ operation of the corporation. As such,
a large chunk of critique of capitalism and grassroots anti-capitalist resistance [are transformed] into a struggle where capitalism’s violence is reduced to “corporate wrongdoing” and where, once accountability mechanisms exist, the backlash is reversed and the corporation and thus capitalism are “fixed”.Footnote 154
In sum, whereas corporate accountability through criminal law may occasionally serve to restrain business involvement in most severe forms of abuses, it can only achieve cosmetic changes, while leaving most of corporate-driven environmental (and other) exploitation unchallenged.
The above critiques of the field of business and human rights, read alongside ongoing debates around the regulation and authorization of DSM, shed light on some contradictions inherent in the proposal to criminalize ecocide in the Rome Statute. First, as observed above, they illustrate how, by proscribing the most severe forms of environmental harms, ICL obscures the everyday functioning of the law and its role in the continued exploitation, commodification, and appropriation of the natural world, as well as in the reproduction of hierarchies between living beings. Second, similarly to the principle of sustainable development and the discourse on business and human rights, the proposed definition of the crime of ecocide attempts to reconcile conflicting values, values which quite simply, we suggest, are not reconcilable. In so doing, it frames both environmental protection and destruction as legitimate aims under the existing legal framework. Such a framework ultimately works to shore up the exploitation of the natural world, while shielding from responsibility those most implicated in its destruction.
4. Conclusion
The proposed definition of ecocide sits against the backdrop of an ever-increasing body of scholarship of ‘anxiety’ in Braidotti’s terms,Footnote 155 in which the environmental ‘crisis’ looms large. This article is a plea to ensure that our attempts to address that ‘crisis’ (for a lack of better word) are not drafted in panic, prioritizing the use of terms that best capture the popular imagination. Rather, we suggest taking a step back and ensuring that attempts at mobilizing the law for socio-ecological gains are adequately thought through in a holistic way, so that legal arguments may be tactically deployed to advance the aims of progressive constituencies.Footnote 156 In this regard, we agree with Klabbers that international lawyers’ emphasis on accountability is a symptom of a moral and intellectual crisis. Klabbers argues that:
the drive towards accountability is a manifestation of an urge to punish – a primitive urge dressed up in the respectable language of accountability, responsibility, or the unimpeachable desire to bring an end to the culture of impunity. The language is respectable, the urge less so.Footnote 157
As a multitude of critical voices and social movements have compellingly pointed out, environmental and climate disruptions are the product of political economic choices that need to be radically rethought, including by recognizing the role of international law in facilitating multiple ‘meltdowns’.Footnote 158 Yet, the move to codify ecocide and make it a ‘fifth’ international crime within the ICC Statute reproduces all the shortcomings of individualized, a historical, and a contextual responses to the unfolding ecological breakdown. Hence, a more critical engagement with the criminalization of environmental protection is needed from within the ICL community. However, it is furthermore clear that the proposed definition of ecocide also needs to be analysed within the wider framework of international law and how the latter not only regulates, but produces the ‘environment’ (and vice versa).Footnote 159 In this vein, we have suggested to situate the ‘new’ crime of ecocide within the broader political economic dynamics of international law. This is necessary, we have argued, because international law is deeply embedded in extractive capitalism, operating to uphold a particular vision of political economy that defines nature as a resource, object, or commodity to be appropriated, managed, or exploited.Footnote 160 We supported this position by drawing upon a variety of critical perspectives, notably on critiques of ICL’s emphasis on the ‘spectacular’, of the principle of sustainable development, of business and human rights discourse, as well as ongoing debates on the legalization of DSM. Locating efforts to codify ecocide within those larger debates and historical trajectories, sheds light on the tensions and contradictions implicit in the turn to criminalization to preserve nature. An international crime of ecocide will not only be inserted into the existing normative framework but, as we have pointed out, the proposed definition, although adopting a language of care and protection, is already being constructed in a way that ensures that the same ordinary dynamics of appropriation and commodification of the natural world will likewise be upheld. Ultimately, as lawyers and scholars who feel strongly about environmental justice, this article is a cri de coeur to resist and seek to reverse the trend towards policing and criminalization, imagining more just presents (and futures) that take seriously our shared obligations to nature and other living beings.