<i>‘This visionary Special Issue articulates the path forward for a rights-based approach to tackling the global environmental crisis. As the clock approaches midnight, this superb volume identifies the transformative changes urgently needed to achieve just and sustainable societies. Essential reading for anyone concerned about human rights and the future of life on Earth.’</i>
- David Boyd, UN Special Rapporteur on human rights and the environment,
<i>‘This Special Issue of the </i>Journal of Human Rights and the Environment entitled Human Rights and the Planet<i> is a very timely adjunct to the UN General Assembly’s recent resolution recognising the right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment as a human right. The Issue includes the Strasbourg Principles of International Environmental Human Rights Law, which provide a strong foundational reference for legal obligations in this contested area of law. Hopefully these principles will evolve to include the protection of Indigenous and environmental rights defenders and a stronger basis for intergenerational justice.’</i>
- Ian Fry, Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights in the context of climate change,
<i>‘This Special Issue of the </i>Journal of Human Rights and the Environment<i> constitutes a valuable contribution for experts in environmental law and human rights in their desire to study and to evolve the virtuous circle that constitutes a definitive symbiosis of these two disciplines in the defence of the environment and in response to the need to energetically confront the problem of climate change and environmental degradation.’</i>
- Néstor Cafferatta, Lawyer and Environmental Secretary, Supreme Court of Justice of Argentina and Professor of Environmental Law, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina,
<i>‘Can a universal, recognised and enforceable right to a safe, clean, healthy and sustainable environment save the world’s environment and tackle the climate crisis? What can or should the European Court of Human Rights do while awaiting such a global binding legal instrument? These are the main questions addressed from different angles in the contributions to this Special Issue of the </i>Journal of Human Rights and the Environment <i>as a follow-up to the conference “Human Rights for the Planet” held in 2020 at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. A must read!’</i>
- Luc Lavrysen, President of the Constitutional Court of Belgium, President of the European Union Forum of Judges for the Environment (EUFJE),
<i>‘Climate change and environmental degradation are at present the greatest, most pervasive threats to human rights. This Special Issue provides a nuanced picture of the role of the European Court of Human Rights in addressing these threats, highlighting challenges but also opportunities to ensure that the Court continues to live up to its mandate — and contributes to turning the tide.’</i>
- Margaretha Wewerinke-Singh, Leiden University, the Netherlands and University of the South Pacific,
Leading scholars and practitioners, including the President of the European Court of Human Rights, provide important insights into current thinking about environmental human rights in different jurisdictions and ways in which the European Court could adapt its principles and practice in light of the evolving international environmental human rights corpus iuris.
Drawing together theoretical insights and practice-led commentary, the contributions to this important book will be of interest to human rights and environmental law scholars, practitioners, students and policy makers.