ABSTRACT

From the first appearance of the term in law in the Clean Water Act of 1972 (US), ecological integrity has been debated by a wide range of researchers, including biologists, ecologists, philosophers, legal scholars, doctors and epidemiologists, whose joint interest was the study and understanding of ecological/biological integrity from various standpoints and disciplines. This volume discusses the need for ecological integrity as a major guiding principle in a variety of policy areas, to counter the present ecological and economic crises with their multiple effects on human rights. 

The book celebrates the 20th anniversary of the Global Ecological Integrity Group and reassesses the basic concept of ecological integrity in order to show how a future beyond catastrophe and disaster is in fact possible, but only if civil society and ultimately legal regimes acknowledge the necessity to consider ecointegrity as a primary factor in decision-making. This is key to the support of basic rights to clean air and water, for halting climate change, and also the basic rights of women and indigenous people. As the authors clearly show, all these rights ultimately depend upon accepting policies that acknowledge the pivotal role of ecological integrity.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

The role and history of integrity (from grave problems to possible reversals)

chapter 2|11 pages

Environmental norms in the courtroom

The case of ecological integrity in Canada's National Parks

chapter 3|15 pages

The future of the common heritage of mankind

Intersections with the public trust doctrine

part II|62 pages

Ecological integrity and basic rights

chapter 7|12 pages

Granting development consent by specific legislative act

Choice to circumvent public participation and judicial control? The European perspective

chapter 8|16 pages

The principle of “integration” in international law relating to sustainable development

Sobering lessons for European Union law

part III|2 pages

From disintegrity to ethical concern

chapter 12|15 pages

Dollars and dreams

Legal aspirations and report cards in the Murray–Darling Basin of Australia

part IV|67 pages

Integrity and economy

chapter 14|11 pages

Enhancing global regulation

Exploring alternative financial machinery

chapter 16|11 pages

The virtuous circle of degrowth and ecological debt

A new paradigm for public international law?

part V|76 pages

Moving forward

chapter 18|11 pages

The project of Earth Democracy

chapter 19|10 pages

Dreaming the universe

Contending stories of our place in the cosmos

chapter 20|12 pages

Occupy Wall Street

The origins and trajectory of a movement to make a new world possible

chapter 21|11 pages

The legacy of Rio + 20

Saving the commons from the market

chapter 22|27 pages

Confronting collapse

Human cognition and the challenge for economics