Out Now:
Anthology on Rights of Nature edited by Frank Adloff &Tanja Busse
published by the German Federal Agency for Civic Education (bpb)
The 2021 anthology edited by Frank Adloff and Tanja Busse, “Welche Rechte braucht die Natur? Wege aus dem Artensterben” (What Rights Does Nature Need? Paths out of the Extinction of Species), has just been published by the German Federal Agency for Civic Education (Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung bpb).
It contains 244 pages with essays by Alberto Acosta, Anna Deplazes-Zemp, Aurea Mota, Peter Niesen, and many more and can be purchased for 4.50 euros here.
Die Definition nicht-menschlicher Lebewesen als juristische Personen würde einen Bruch mit den anthropozentrischen Grundlagen westlicher Gesellschaftsordnungen und eine radikale Transformation bewirken. So könnten Tiere ein Klagerecht erhalten, Wildtieren Landeigentumsrechte eingeräumt und die Interessen von Wäldern, der Luft und der Meere gegenüber den Besitz- und Nutzungsrechten von Menschen effektiv vertreten werden.”
“For decades, scientists have warned of mankind’s destructive treatment of the biosphere, which has already led to the irreversible loss of numerous species and threatens countless others. In contributions from the social, legal, cultural and natural sciences as well as philosophy and with recourse to indigenous understandings of nature, the authors discuss the question of whether this destruction could be counteracted more effectively with legal means than with previous measures of nature conservation.
The definition of non-human living beings as legal persons would bring about a break with the anthropocentric foundations of Western social orders and a radical transformation. Thus, animals could be given the right to sue, wildlife could be granted land ownership rights, and the interests of forests, the air, and the oceans could be effectively represented vis-à-vis the property and use rights of humans.”