Abstract
This essay explores the implications of the right to a healthy environment for the long-standing criticisms of international human rights law as a project and product of the Global North. It examines the Southern origins of the right to a healthy environment and its interpretations in regional human rights tribunals. The essay analyzes the responses offered by this evolving jurisprudence to various objections to human rights-based approaches to environmental protection. These include the human rights-based framework's individualism, anthropocentrism, failure to address transboundary harm, and failure to challenge the economic law instruments that perpetuate environmental degradation.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gonzalez, C. G. (2023). The Right to a Healthy Environment and the Global South. In AJIL Unbound (Vol. 117, pp. 173–178). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/aju.2023.26
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