ABSTRACT

This handbook explores, contextualises and critiques the relationship between anthropocentrism – the idea that human beings are socially and politically at the centre of the cosmos – and international law.

While the critical study of anthropocentrism has been under way for several years, it has either focused on specific subfields of international law or emanated from two distinctive strands inspired by the animal rights movement and deep ecology. This handbook offers a broader study of anthropocentrism in international law as a global legal system and academic field. It assesses the extent to which current international law is anthropocentric, contextualises that claim in relation to broader critical theories of anthropocentrism, and explores alternative ways for international law to organise relations between humans and other living and non-living entities.

This book will interest international lawyers, environmental lawyers, legal theorists, social theorists, and those concerned with the philosophy and ethics of ecology and the non-human realms.

Chapter 6 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license. Funded by University of Gothenburg and Lund University.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

The Complexities of Anthropocentrism in International Law

part Section 1|132 pages

Unveiling the Anthropocentrism of International Law

chapter 1|22 pages

‘One Vast Gasoline Station for Human Exploitation’

Sovereignty as Anthropocentric Extraction

chapter 6|21 pages

Ordering Human–Other relationships

International Humanitarian Law and Ecologies of Armed Conflicts in the Anthropocene

part Section 2|118 pages

Conceptualising the Anthropocentrism of International Law

chapter 10|17 pages

Indigenous Knowledge and International (Anthropocentric) Law

The Politics of Thinking from (and for) Another World

chapter 11|16 pages

Earth Jurisprudence

Anthropocentrism and Neoliberal Rationality

chapter 12|30 pages

Global Animal Law, Pain, and Death

An International Law for the Dominion

part Section 3|78 pages

Imagining a Non-Anthropocentric International Law

chapter 14|16 pages

A Non-Anthropocentric Indigenous Research Methodology

The Anishinabe Waterdrum, Residential Schools, and Settler Colonialism

chapter 17|16 pages

Formless Infinite

Law beyond the Anthropocene and the Earth System