ABSTRACT

This chapter proposes that people give legal rights to forests, oceans, rivers and other so-called "natural objects" in the environment-indeed, to the natural environment as a whole. But for a thing to be a holder of legal rights, something more is needed than that some authoritative body will review the actions and processes of those who threaten it. As the author shall use the term, "holder of legal rights," each of three additional criteria must be satisfied. Natural objects would have standing in their own right, through a guardian; damage to and through them would be ascertained and considered as an independent factor; and they would be the beneficiaries of legal awards. In such fashion, judges who could unabashedly refer to the "legal rights of the environment" would be encouraged to develop a viable body of law-in part simply through the availability and force of the expression.