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Full Description
As the world grapples with the escalating climate crisis, ecosystems are collapsing, and the planet's future hangs in the balance. For centuries, our legal systems have treated nature as something to be owned and exploited, but a bold new movement is challenging this paradigm.
In The Forest Fights Back, Jessica den Outer explores a groundbreaking global movement—Rights of Nature—taking on the legal system to recognise the rights of rivers, forests, and mountains to exist, flourish, and sustain their ecological balance. From the fight for the Whanganui River in New Zealand to the battle for Spain's Mar Menor lagoon, den Outer highlights the campaigns led by grassroots communities, telling stories of determination and legal ingenuity.
This movement goes beyond law - it represents a cultural shift that could reshape how we live, think, co-exist and advocate for nature.
Contents
Introduction
1. Professor Stone and the birth of Rights for Nature
2. People and nature protected from polluters in Pennsylvania
3. Waterbodies appear before the courts in Florida
4. New chapter on the River Ouse in Sussex, England
5. A river with legal personality in New Zealand
6. A difficult struggle for sacred rivers in India
7. The Colombian Amazon rainforest has its own rights
8. Rights for Mother Earth in the Constitution of Ecuador
9. Spain is leading the way in Europe with rights for a lagoon
10. Initiatives in the Netherlands: from the Wadden Sea to the Meuse River
11. Nothing is more powerful than an idea whose time has come
12. Join the movement