ResponsAbility: Law and Governance for Living Well with the Earth

Author:   Betsan Martin ,  Linda Te Aho ,  Maria Humphries-Kil
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367734053


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   18 December 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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ResponsAbility: Law and Governance for Living Well with the Earth


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Full Product Details

Author:   Betsan Martin ,  Linda Te Aho ,  Maria Humphries-Kil
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.385kg
ISBN:  

9780367734053


ISBN 10:   0367734052
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   18 December 2020
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

About the authors Foreword (Justice Antonio Herman Bejamin) Introduction (Betsan Martin) Chapter 1. Ngā Pou Rāhui: Responsable Laws for Water and Climate (Betsan Martin) Chapter 2. Reclaiming the Global Commons: Towards Earth Trusteeship (Klaus Bosselmann) Chapter 3. Responsibility, State and International Law (Pierre Calame) Chapter 4. Public Responsibility: A Fundamental Concept Reflected Throughout the Ages; Where did we lose the plot? (Gay Morgan) Chapter 5. Confronting the Insupportable: Resources of the Law of Responsibility (Alain Supoit) Chapter 6. Responsibility and the Transformative Role of Law (Neetu Sharma) Chapter 7. The Principle of Responsibility in the Global Response to Climate Change: Origins and Evolution (Adrian Macey) Chapter 8. An Ethic of Responsibility in Samoan Customary Law (His Highness Tui Atua Tupua Tamasese Ta’isi Efi) Chapter 9. Indigenous Law and Responsible Water Governance (Hon Sir Edward Taihākurei Durie KNZM) Chapter 10. Governance of Water Based on Responsible Use – An elegant solution? (Linda Te Aho) Chapter 11. Reflecting on Landscapes of Obligation, their Making and Tacit Constitutionalisation: freshwater claims, proprietorship and ‘stewardship’ (Mark Hickford) Chapter 12. Rivers As Ancestors And Other Realities: Governance Of Waterways In Aotearoa / New Zealand (Anne Salmond) Chapter 13. The Power & Potential of the Public Trust: Insight from Hawaiʻi’s Water Battles and Triumphs (Kapua Sproat and Mahina Tuteur) Chapter 14. From Rights to Responsibilities using Legal Personhood and Guardianship for Rivers (Catherine Iorns Magallanes) Chapter 15. Making Law (Gerald Torres) Index

Reviews

Observing that social movements often play an important role as fore-runners for commonly accepted principles of justice, this boundary breaking book asks the difficult question of how to engender responsibility in society and in law to live sustainably and well on our shared planet. Drawing on legal jurisprudence and philosophy from indigenous and western traditions, the book explores new concepts such as instilling legal rights and personality to rivers or other entities of nature. The book recognizes the imperative role that the private sector holds as the primary generator of economic activity, thus driving jobs, poverty reduction and government income streams, but notes that given its heavy environmental footprint, a duty of care emerges for the private sector. The book explores how to reconcile and combine the health of our economies with societal and planetary health. As a species, humans have reached the point where our actions are impacting the very sustainability of the planet - -our one and only home. IUCN has long championed the concept of the rights of nature. This book explores this notion and further expands that with such rights comes a human responsibility of caring for the earth. The book concludes that by challenging the existing set of social practices and the rules that those practices reflect, social movements, almost by definition are engaged in a form of law making. For the sustainability of the planet as we know it, informed social engagement is therefore critical. Inger Anderson, Director General, International Union for Conservation of Nature, Switzerland As the state of the Earth gets more dire, many are grappling for new ideas and approaches in the quest for fresh solutions. This volume is one trove of such alternatives. Take 'responsibility' for example. If you try and google it you will most probably get no hit. Or at best an error message directing you to


Observing that social movements often play an important role as fore-runners for commonly accepted principles of justice, this boundary breaking book asks the difficult question of how to engender responsibility in society and in law to live sustainably and well on our shared planet. Drawing on legal jurisprudence and philosophy from indigenous and western traditions, the book explores new concepts such as instilling legal rights and personality to rivers or other entities of nature. The book recognizes the imperative role that the private sector holds as the primary generator of economic activity, thus driving jobs, poverty reduction and government income streams, but notes that given its heavy environmental footprint, a duty of care emerges for the private sector. The book explores how to reconcile and combine the health of our economies with societal and planetary health. As a species, humans have reached the point where our actions are impacting the very sustainability of the planet - -our one and only home. IUCN has long championed the concept of the rights of nature. This book explores this notion and further expands that with such rights comes a human responsibility of caring for the earth. The book concludes that by challenging the existing set of social practices and the rules that those practices reflect, social movements, almost by definition are engaged in a form of law making. For the sustainability of the planet as we know it, informed social engagement is therefore critical. Inger Anderson, Director General, International Union for Conservation of Nature, Switzerland As the state of the Earth gets more dire, many are grappling for new ideas and approaches in the quest for fresh solutions. This volume is one trove of such alternatives. Take 'responsibility' for example. If you try and google it you will most probably get no hit. Or at best an error message directing you to responsibility. That briefly sums up how refreshing this volume is, written by various experts and practitioners on the subject from the western, eastern and indigenous perspectives. It throws light on the issues of law and governance. More so in the context for living well with Mother Earth aligned to the Paris Agreement of 2015 and the Sustainable Development Goals 2016-2030. . It brings the discussion to the next level on trusteeship and legal personhood for nature. And raises new challenges to find law which recognizes and supports interdependencies, with the relationships between the different parts of society, and between human and non-human forms of life - it includes the need for ecocentric law. New challenges include redefining existing relationship and paradigms to give greater meaning and relevance in the search for a sustainable future. There is no doubt that this timely volume is tour de force meant for those are serious in translating the future that we want into reality. ResponsAbility: Law and Governance for Living Well with the Earth is addressed to law and governance and it goes beyond the confines of state interests and opens the horizon of law in the interests of the planet. Prof. Dzulkifli Abdul Razak, Immediate Past President, International Association of Universities This unique collection of essays is grounded in a common vision shared by both Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars, drawing upon their different experiences and worldviews, that shine a light on the necessity for embracing global approaches to govern our remaining natural resources and minimize the devastation being generated by climate change as much as possible for the survival of humanity. While using law as the best means to foster such change is a common element, the key importance of this book is its focus on exploring the ethic of shared responsibility and relationships among communities as the building block for social action. Bradford W. Morse, Dean and Professor of Law, Thompson Rivers University, Canada


"""Observing that social movements often play an important role as fore-runners for commonly accepted principles of justice, this boundary breaking book asks the difficult question of how to engender responsibility in society and in law to live sustainably and well on our shared planet. Drawing on legal jurisprudence and philosophy from indigenous and western traditions, the book explores new concepts such as instilling legal rights and personality to rivers or other entities of nature. The book recognizes the imperative role that the private sector holds as the primary generator of economic activity, thus driving jobs, poverty reduction and government income streams, but notes that given its heavy environmental footprint, a ""duty of care"" emerges for the private sector. The book explores how to reconcile and combine the health of our economies with societal and planetary health. As a species, humans have reached the point where our actions are impacting the very sustainability of the planet – –our one and only home. IUCN has long championed the concept of the rights of nature. This book explores this notion and further expands that with such rights comes a human responsibility of caring for the earth. The book concludes that by challenging the existing set of social practices and the rules that those practices reflect, social movements, almost by definition are engaged in a form of law making. For the sustainability of the planet as we know it, informed social engagement is therefore critical."" Inger Anderson, Director General, International Union for Conservation of Nature, Switzerland ""As the state of the Earth gets more dire, many are grappling for new ideas and approaches in the quest for fresh solutions. This volume is one trove of such alternatives. Take ‘responsibility’ for example. If you try and google it you will most probably get no hit. Or at best an error message directing you to"


Observing that social movements often play an important role as fore-runners for commonly accepted principles of justice, this boundary breaking book asks the difficult question of how to engender responsibility in society and in law to live sustainably and well on our shared planet. Drawing on legal jurisprudence and philosophy from indigenous and western traditions, the book explores new concepts such as instilling legal rights and personality to rivers or other entities of nature. The book recognizes the imperative role that the private sector holds as the primary generator of economic activity, thus driving jobs, poverty reduction and government income streams, but notes that given its heavy environmental footprint, a duty of care emerges for the private sector. The book explores how to reconcile and combine the health of our economies with societal and planetary health. As a species, humans have reached the point where our actions are impacting the very sustainability of the planet - -our one and only home. IUCN has long championed the concept of the rights of nature. This book explores this notion and further expands that with such rights comes a human responsibility of caring for the earth. The book concludes that by challenging the existing set of social practices and the rules that those practices reflect, social movements, almost by definition are engaged in a form of law making. For the sustainability of the planet as we know it, informed social engagement is therefore critical. Inger Anderson, Director General, International Union for Conservation of Nature, Switzerland As the state of the Earth gets more dire, many are grappling for new ideas and approaches in the quest for fresh solutions. This volume is one trove of such alternatives. Take 'responsibility' for example. If you try and google it you will most probably get no hit. Or at best an error message directing you to


Author Information

Betsan Martin is a founding member and Executive Chair of the International Alliance for Responsible and Sustainable Societies, an inspirational think tank and resource centre working with responsibility as a framework for 21st-century issues. Betsan had a leading role in establishing the UNU Centre of Expertise in Education for Sustainable Development at the University of Waikato. She is active with the global network of UNU Centres of Expertise. Betsan’s academic research in philosophy of education specialized in an ethics of responsibility, which informs themes in her work in integrating social, environmental and economic areas. Publications include focus on water governance, responsibility and ethics, education for sustainability, and responsibility in law. Linda Te Aho is of Waikato-Tainui descent and serves on the tribal executive committee, Te Arataura, and as a director of the commercial entity Tainui Group Holdings Ltd. An Associate Professor in Law, Linda's research focuses on contemporary issues in Law and Governance, with a particular interest in Indigenous Peoples’ rights and responsibilities in relation to land and freshwater issues. Linda was the founding director of the Māori and Indigenous Governance Centre at the University of Waikato and provides legal and strategic advice to both Māori and the Crown in relation to negotiated Treaty Settlements and law reform. Linda served as a guardian under the Waikato River Settlement and is currently the editor of the Waikato Law Review. Maria Humphries-Kil has academic and research interests in Management Education. She is a co-author of the textbook: Understanding Management Critically (2014). Informing this publication are over 50 academic papers, and many conference contributions.

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