<i>âThe editors have tackled a difficult subject and are to be applauded for fashioning a volume that will surely stand the test of time as a landmark for environmental law scholars in the years to come.â</i>
- Benjamin J Richardson, Journal of Human Rights and the Environment,
<i>âThe book is a thought-provoking journey of different, often experimental, innovative ideas that stretch the boundaries of environmental law research and scholarship. The volume contributes towards efforts to drive more inter-disciplinary approaches in environmental law, while critically reflecting on theoretical and methodological understandings. The diversity in disciplinary backgrounds of the authors provide a rich array of perspectives. The inter-disciplinary lens of the book is particularly topical. The section on materiality, for example, is very useful for environmental law scholars considering how to incorporate the surge of work on ânature-societyâ relations in the humanities and social sciences.â</i>
- Law Environment and Development Journal,
<i>âThis collection takes a bold step towards re-situating the legal enterprise alongside those bodies whose movement it strives to direct, thereby revitalising the sense of lawâs immanence to what has elsewhere been dubbed âthe lawscapeâ, i.e. the entangled continuum of law and bodies.â</i>
- Luigi Russi, Griffith Law Review,