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53 Wake Forest L. Rev. 667 (2018)
Environmental Constitutionalism in Defense of Nature

handle is hein.journals/wflr53 and id is 699 raw text is: 





      ENVIRONMENTAL CONSTITUTIONALISM IN
                  DEFENSE OF NATURE


                          Erin Daly


        Most of the world's population live in countries whose
    constitutions protect environmental rights in one way or
    another and, increasingly, courts throughout the globe are
    implementing    these  provisions   to  advance    both
    environmental and human rights. This Article examines
    some of the most innovative ways constitutional courts have
    sought to vindicate these rights to better protect nature and
    natural resources. It describes how the limitations on human
    rights law impacts the protection of natural resources and
    suggests that constitutional law can help to fill some of these
    gaps, creating  new   opportunities for  vindication  of
    environmental and human rights. The Article then explores
    two innovations in constitutional adjudication-primarily
    from South America and the Indian sub-continent-that have
    further expanded   opportunities for protection  of the
    environment and of natural resources, first, by expanding the
    range of people who can bring claims based on environmental
    human rights, and second, by extending juridical personhood
    to nature itself. As environmental constitutionalism has
    evolved and become interwoven into the fabric of judicial
    decision-making, courts have adapted their constitutional
    doctrines to advance environmentally protective ends.

                      TABLE OF CONTENTS
1.    INTRODU CTION ......................................................................... 668
II.   THE GAPS LEFT BY INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS AND
      ENVIRONM  ENTAL LAW ............................................................. 668
III.  ENVIRONMENTAL CONSTITUTIONALISM FILLS THE GAPS ....... 671
IV.   STANDING: EXPANDING THE RIGHTS OF PEOPLE TO A
      H EALTHY ENVIRONM  ENT ......................................................... 678


    * Professor of Law, Widener University Delaware Law School; Co-Founder
of the Dignity Rights Project and Director of the Global Network for Human
Rights and the Environment. My special thanks to John Knox, whose influence
on the development of this field has been immeasurable, and to Jimmy May for
ever-helpful comments and suggestions on a previous version of this Article.

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