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.
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