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Legal Rights for Rivers - Competition, Collaboration and Water Governance (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,272
Discovery Miles 12 720
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Legal Rights for Rivers - Competition, Collaboration and Water Governance (Paperback)
Series: Earthscan Studies in Water Resource Management
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In 2017 four rivers in Aotearoa New Zealand, India, and Colombia
were given the status of legal persons, and there was a recent
attempt to extend these rights to the Colorado River in the USA.
Understanding the implications of creating legal rights for rivers
is an urgent challenge for both water resource management and
environmental law. Giving rivers legal rights means the law can see
rivers as legal persons, thus creating new legal rights which can
then be enforced. When rivers are legally people, does that
encourage collaboration and partnership between humans and rivers,
or establish rivers as another competitor for scarce resources? To
assess what it means to give rivers legal rights and legal
personality, this book examines the form and function of
environmental water managers (EWMs). These organisations have legal
personality, and have been active in water resource management for
over two decades. EWMs operate by acquiring water rights from
irrigators in rivers where there is insufficient water to maintain
ecological health. EWMs can compete with farmers for access to
water, but they can also strengthen collaboration between
traditionally divergent users of the aquatic environment, such as
environmentalists, recreational fishers, hunters, farmers, and
hydropower. This book explores how EWMs use the opportunities
created by giving nature legal rights, such as the ability to
participate in markets, enter contracts, hold property, and enforce
those rights in court. However, examination of the EWMs unearths a
crucial and unexpected paradox: giving legal rights to nature may
increase its legal power, but in doing so it can weaken community
support for protecting the environment in the first place. The book
develops a new conceptual framework to identify the multiple
constructions of the environment in law, and how these
constructions can interact to generate these unexpected outcomes.
It explores EWMs in the USA and Australia as examples, and assesses
the implications of creating legal rights for rivers for water
governance. Lessons from the EWMs, as well as early lessons from
the new 'river persons,' show how to use the law to improve river
protection and how to begin to mitigate the problems of the
paradox.
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