Environmental, Indigenous & human rights groups slam net-zero ‘smoke and mi
At the halfway point of COP26, leading Indigenous, environmental and human rights NGOs are criticising the focus on ‘net-zero’ targets due to their over-reliance on offsetting scams and unproven technology.
Your Guide to Ecocide – Part 2: The Hard Part - Opinio Juris
[Darryl Robinson is a Professor at Queen’s University, Faculty of Law (Canada), specializing in international criminal justice.] In part one of this post, I mapped out the main controversies a…
Earth Jurisprudence: what you need to know - Gaia Foundation
As part of our first ever Earth Jurisprudence week, we share the four key things you need to know about Earth Jurisprudence- what it is, where the idea comes from... Read More
Lawyers Are Working to Put 'Ecocide' on Par with War Crimes. Could an Inte
BY MÉLISSA GODIN FEBRUARY 19, 2021 7:56 AM EST When a Nigerian judge ruled in 2005 that Shell’s practice of gas flaring in the Niger Delta was a violation of citizens’ constitutional rights to life and dignity, Nnummo Bassey, a local environmental activist, was thrilled. Bassey’s organization, Frien
Native Knowledge: What Ecologists Are Learning from Indigenous People - Yal
From Alaska to Australia, scientists are turning to the knowledge of traditional people for a deeper understanding of the natural world. What they are learning is helping them discover more about everything from melting Arctic ice, to protecting fish stocks, to controlling wildfires.
Mongabay seeks to raise interest in and appreciation of wild lands and wildlife, while examining the impact of emerging trends in climate, technology, economics,and finance on conservation and development.
A Healer's Last Journey: Documenting Endangered Knowledge in the Colombian
After 80 years studying the medicinal plants of the páramo -- an endangered alpine tundra ecosystem -- Mama Margarita says today may be her last time making the eight-hour, round-trip hike into the Andes.